Key issues in environmental policy, focusing on the power and interest mechanisms that determine environmental resource access and sustainable use. Case-specific applications explore the dynamic roles of the global and the local including international development paradigms, indigenous resource rights, common-pool resource management, powerful policy networks, and local communities struggling in between.
This course may be repeated for credit.
Notes
- May not be offered every year. Consult the department for more information.
Prerequisite(s)
- Geography 321 plus one of 361, 421, 425, 429, or consent of the Department.
Sections