Global Environmental Politics
Course Description
Summary
Contemporary efforts to confront our most pressing ecological problems are characterized by a tension between the global realities of these problems and the territorial borders and logics that define sovereign nation-states. This course will explore this tension in three parts. First, we will engage with a variety of theoretical and conceptual debates introduced by scholars of global environmental politics β€” a heterodox field that draws insights from international relations theory, international political economy, ecological economics, and environmental sociology (among others). Second, we will put these theories and concepts to work by turning to case studies related to biodiversity loss, the hazardous waste trade, natural resource extraction, population and consumption, the ozone layer, and climate change. Third, the course will conclude with a mock U.N. Climate Negotiation in which students will play the role of particular states and stakeholder groups.
Learning Outcomes
- Learn about the issues that comprise global environmental politics.
- Analyze these issues critically, using the conceptual tools provided by scholars and activists engaged in global environmental politics.
- Understand the history of international environmental negotiations -- the power dynamics that shape them, the institutional norms that govern them, and the successes and (mostly) failures that have characterized global environmental politics from 1970 to the present.
Cross List
- Environment