Environmental History & Social Justice

Course Code:
EST 310
Course Group(s):
Degree Applicable, ECM: Environmental Issues Electives, ESM: Electives, Integrative Studies: ENST Program Options, Liberal Arts and Science Elective, PACM: Human Dimension Cluster, Social & Cultural Engagement - Integrated
Course Description:
This course looks at the historical, cultural and ecological basis for our changing concepts of the environment. The course provides an overview of US environmental history in an effort to understand the interactions, interdependencies and changes implicit in the relationship between human culture and the environment. American history is characterized by the paradox of the bounty of the continent's vast natural resources and subsequent establishment of natural institutions, such as our National Park System, and the sweeping and often catastrophic ecological changes wrought on the landscape by the process of Manifest Destiny and industrialization. Environmental history combines political, social, ecological, artistic and literary forms to clarify how our culture's concept of the environment has changed over time. Prerequisite: Social Cultural Foundation level course Completes General Education Requirements:SC-I, LAS.
Credit:
3
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