AUTHOR=Hurth Victoria , Stewart Iain S. TITLE=Re-purposing Universities: The Path to Purpose JOURNAL=Frontiers in Sustainability VOLUME=Volume 2 - 2021 YEAR=2022 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/sustainability/articles/10.3389/frsus.2021.762271 DOI=10.3389/frsus.2021.762271 ISSN=2673-4524 ABSTRACT=As the extent of damage to environmental systems from our business-as-usual activity becomes ever more alarming, Universities as core social institutions are under pressure to help society lead the transition to a sustainable future. Their response to the issues, that they themselves have helped reveal, has, however, been widely criticised for being well below expectations. Universities can be observed to engage with sustainability issues in ad-hoc ways, with the scale of attention and commitment dependant mainly on the level of pressure exerted by stakeholders which works to overcome aspects of inherent inertia. Sustainability initiatives can therefore be observed mainly as bolt-ons. This mirrors how other sectors, including businesses, have tended to respond. As the environmental and social crises mounts and the window for adaptive change to ensure long-term wellbeing for all narrows, the pressure for deeper systemic change builds. It is in this context that transformation to a ‘purpose-driven organization’ has emerged as a systemic approach to change, enabling an organization to align deeply with society’s long-term best interest and hence a sustainable future. Nowhere has this concept been taken forward more obviously than in the business sector. As business leadership towards purpose becomes more apparent, so the lack of action in this area by universities appears starker. In this paper we clarify what it means to be a purpose-driven organization, why and how it represents a deep holistic response to unsustainability, and what practical first steps governing bodies and executive managers of universities could take to begin the transformation their institutions into purpose-driven universities.