UCIL20092 (10 Credits)
UCIL20592 (20 Credits)
Exploring a series of modern environmental crises -- from pollution to overfishing to extinction to climate change -- this unit will investigate the origins, nature and future of environmental thinking and its socio-economic consequences. We will work to untangle the narratives that led to the emergence of the 'environment' as an object worth protecting and will ask questions: who speaks on behalf of the environment, who acts on its behalf, and what matters in the attempts to solve environmental issues? Rather than diagnosing the crisis, the unit will instead challenge you to discover the deep-seated sources of human actions that resulted in a shattering of global ecological balance as well as the birth of environmental stewardship.
You will be asked to think locally and globally, working to understand how different scales of problems and magnitudes of risks determine the availability of policies.
The unit encourages you to think creatively and you will be encouraged to produce original analyses and challenge preconceptions.
This unit aims to familiarise you with the fundamentals of modern environmental history and provide an introduction to environmental activism and policy, using case studies that include ocean crisis, plastic pollution, digital waste, environmental health, climate change, man-made disasters and food security.
The unit explores key environmental issues and trends during the last two hundred years, examining the cultural and economic histories of 'nature', and their relation to the emergence of risk society and the politics of environment. We will look into the very origins of environmental crises and analyse how societies define risk, produce waste and conceptualise cleanliness.
On successful completion of the unit, you will be able to:
In addition, for 20 credits:
10 credits
20 credits
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Vladimir Jankovic