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Socio-environmental Dynamics
Course teacher(s)
Louise Knops (Coordinator)ECTS credits
5
Language(s) of instruction
english
Course content
Objectives (and/or specific learning outcomes)
Be able to analyse socio-environmental dynamics reflectively and critically.
Understand the differences between approaches, their disagreements and incompatibilities around the main debates in the field.
Reflect on socio-environmental issues in an inter and transdisciplinary fashion.
Be able to understand complex texts.
Think about the connections that make environmental problems so difficult to tackle.
Be capable of understanding perspectives from other disciplines and percourses.
Prerequisites and Corequisites
Required and Corequired knowledge and skills
Please note that the course will be in English. A previous curiosity and a basic understanding of the interactions between society and the environment is very helpful to follow the course.
Teaching methods and learning activities
The course is composed of lectures that will be participatory to the extent possible, considering the number of students attending.
Each lesson is completed by a mandatory reading or podcast, which, together with the complementary readings, will be made available as the course progresses.
The lectures cover the theoretical aspects. Each lecture is completed by a case study, which might presented by a guest lecture, pre-recorded or might constitute the object of the reading.
Contribution to the teaching profile
The course has four main objectives:
Provide an overview of the different approaches and methods used to analyse socio-environmental interactions and understand which are compatible and which aren't.
Explain the consequences and impacts different conceptualisations of socio-environmental dynamics have on governance and management.
Help students become familiar with the core concepts of the presented approaches and use them critically in problem-oriented analyses.
Allow the students to use the theoretical tools learned in their own area of specialty and help the understand how these approaches might be useful when working with others.
References, bibliography, and recommended reading
Mandatory readings will be made available before each lesson as the course progresses.
Besides, the students can read the following works to prepare or complement the course (not mandatory):
Biggs, R., M. Schlüter, M.L. Schoon (Eds.). 2015. Principles for building resilience: Sustaining ecosystem services in social-ecological systems. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
Castree, Noel. 2014. Making Sense of Nature. Abingdon: Routledge.
Chapin, F. S., G. P. Kofinas, C. Folke (Eds.). 2009. Principles of Natural Resource Stewardship: Resilience-Based Management in a Changing World. Springer.
Debaise, D. 2017. Nature as Event. The Lure of the Possible. Durham: Duke University Press.
Haraway, D. J. 2016. Staying with the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene. Durham: Duke University Press.
Other information
Additional information
All used material (ppt, videos, etc.) will be made available to the students as the course progresses.
Contacts
maria.mancilla.garcia@ulb.be
Campus
Solbosch
Evaluation
Method(s) of evaluation
- written examination
- Other
written examination
Other
Each session will start with a discussion of the material facilitated to prepare the session.
The written exam will be composed of five to ten questions (defining concepts, commenting on examples, synthesising the work of an author or an approach, establishing links between different approaches, etc.).
Mark calculation method (including weighting of intermediary marks)
Language(s) of evaluation
- english
- (if applicable Spanish, french, Italian, Portuguese )