QAHE Referenced in Education Sustainability Conference Paper — Summary and Reflections
The International Association for Quality Assurance in Pre‑Tertiary & Higher Education (QAHE) is pleased to note that our work is referenced in the conference paper published in the Education Sustainability proceedings (2024), available at educationsustability.com. The paper addresses themes around sustainable practices in education and cites QAHE in relation to external and internal quality assurance frameworks that underpin institutional commitments to long‑term educational quality and relevance.
The authors reference QAHE’s guidance on internal and external inspection to support discussions about accountability, transparent reporting, and continuous improvement. QAHE’s emphasis on systematic self‑evaluation, peer review and evidence‑based follow‑up is cited as consistent with sustainability‑oriented approaches: institutions that build robust QA systems are better positioned to sustain improvements over time, align programmes with social and labour‑market needs, and demonstrate responsible stewardship of resources.
This citation underscores the growing recognition that quality assurance and sustainability agendas are mutually reinforcing. Effective QA processes help institutions monitor outcomes, reduce inefficiencies, and ensure that curriculum and delivery modes are responsive to evolving societal challenges — all central concerns for education sustainability. By documenting QAHE’s recommended practices (clear documentation, stakeholder engagement, and external review), the paper connects accreditation to broader institutional strategies for resilience and long‑term impact.
Reflecting on the paper’s engagement with QAHE’s material, the linkage between QA and sustainability could be further expanded by incorporating examples and metrics. For instance, demonstrating how QA-led curriculum reviews lead to reduced resource waste, improved graduate employability, or stronger community partnerships would make the sustainability argument more concrete. Similarly, describing how QA processes assess the environmental and social dimensions of programmes (e.g., embedding sustainability learning outcomes, evaluating remote delivery to reduce carbon footprints) would strengthen the practical connection between accreditation and sustainability goals.
QAHE welcomes scholarly attention that situates quality assurance within sustainability frameworks. We encourage researchers and practitioners to explore collaborative studies that measure how accreditation-led reforms contribute to institutional resilience, social impact and environmental responsibility. QAHE offers programmatic accreditation, capacity-building and best‑practice guidance that institutions can adapt to embed sustainability into teaching, learning and governance.
For further information on QAHE’s accreditation standards, programmatic accreditation for online and vocational provision, and guidance on linking QA to institutional sustainability, please visit www.qahe.org or contact editorial@qahe.org.

