Environment General Courses (ENVIRON)
graduate level, taught in Durham
298.41. ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS: TACKLING
SOURCES RATHER THAN SYMPTOMS
Professor Norman Myers
This five-week and ten-session course (with
three hours each session) will examine a series
of environmental problems, asking why we allow
such problems to arise in the first place. Factors
at issue include: political ignorance/ignore-ance;
the media; corporate oligarchies; special interests
and lobbyists; government inertia; perverse subsidies;
tramlines thinking; establishment values; and
scientific traditionalism. Particular topics
to be addressed include: eco-economics; population/consumption;
environmental security; environmental surprises/discontinuities;
scientific uncertainty and public policy; the
interdisciplinary animal; government and governance;
and sustainable development.
If you are ready to think hard, be challenged
(by your fellow students as much as your Prof),
and provoke your grey cells, come and try it
out--though if you prefer to stay in your comfort
zone, don't. Should you wish to join in, leave
your umbrella behind.
This will be a two-unit course. There will be
marked emphasis on class discussion. Assignments
will include a lecturette, “out-of-the-box” thinking
exercises, and contributing to a working group
project. Grades will be based on 50% for class
discussions, 25% for a lecturette and 25% for
a working group project. The teaching method
will be: thirdly, to teach the students myself;
secondly, to get them to teach each other; and
firstly, to learn to teach themselves (to think
independently and pioneeringly). The last teaching
mode implies gaining an acquaintance of all fields
that make up the larger context within which
the environment must find its policy place; to
gain a grasp of the proliferant linkages between
these fields and their disciplines; and to become
aware of what information is out there in the
libraries or on the web, without necessarily
supposing that a student has to become a multi-expert.
Linkages are all, hence there will be much emphasis
on lateral thinking and other perquisites of
the holistic approach.
Students will be asked to do some ahead-of-time
homework by digesting at least 15 papers from
a list of roughly 35 that I shall send on to
be distributed electronically. It will be sufficient
for students to rip the guts out of a paper by
e.g. reading the abstract and introduction, plus
conclusion, together with whatever else is necessary
for the reader to become equipped to give a two-minute
talk on what a paper is about, what it is not
about, and whether the reader thinks it does
a good job. What, you think you can't swallow
15 papers in just a couple of hours? Well, supposing
you were paid $100 for the task, would you still
say it’s impossible? Remember, over 1000 new
papers are published every week, and if you spend
a whole hour on just one paper, you are effectively
denying yourself the chance to check the messages
of lots of other papers. I shall expect students
to digest several other papers per week during
the course, taking no more than one hour for
them all each time.
The course will thus relate to how one might
go about having environmental science implemented
in policy making. It will cover topical issues
such as biodiversity hotspots, ecosystem services
and their shadow-priced values, future evolution
degraded, population/poverty, over- and mis-consumption,
water shortages, deforestation, desertification,
energy deficits, eco-agriculture, zero emissions
industry, and the emergent middle classes in
China, India etc. (all 1.4 billion of them with
purchasing power greater than the United States
in PPP terms).
During the course I shall get students to imagine
themselves at, say, the tenth-year stage of a
professional career in environment, analyzing
and evaluating the various policy options to
shift our societies (businesses, government/governance,
science, technology, finance, investment/trade,
etc.) beyond their present self-defeating paths
and toward a sustainable future in all respects.
The students will thus be required to address
the policy perspectives of e.g. climate change,
of poverty and hunger in Sub-Saharan Africa,
and of the need for more realistic metrics of
human development than the obsolescent mode of
GDP.
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