Climate Change and Globalization

  • Cours (CM) 20h
  • Cours intégrés (CI) -
  • Travaux dirigés (TD) -
  • Travaux pratiques (TP) -
  • Travail étudiant (TE) 85h

Langue de l'enseignement : Anglais

Niveau de l'enseignement : B2-Avancé - Utilisateur indépendant

Description du contenu de l'enseignement

This course will focus on debates about how best to address the challenges of the currently most pressing environmental issue, climate change. It will critically analyze the various strategies proposed by a multitude of actors, from individuals, to local and national governments, to international institutions. The course will treat the following issues: the origins of climate change in the context of globalization; the history of the debates over the risk of climate change; the impact of major national and international institutions; key management concepts (mitigation, adaptation, climate engineering); communication of scientific research and the role of the media, the political issues of the North-South divide; social inequality and migration; and, finally, the search for policy solutions at local, regional, national and international levels.

Compétences à acquérir

Learning outcomes
After completing this course the students will able to
  • use key concepts in climate management
  • have a better historical and political understanding of the main actors
  • articulate the links between climate change, globalization and inequality

Bibliographie, lectures recommandées

  • Dessler, Andrew E. and Edward A. Parson, The Science and Politics of Global Climate Change, third edition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019).
  • Hulme, Mike (ed.), Contemporary Climate Change Debates (Routledge, 2019). IPCC, Fifth Assessment Report (2014).
  • IPCC, Special Report on Global Warming of 1.5 °C (2018).
  • Jasanoff, Sheila and Marybeth Long Martello, Earthly Politics. Local and Global in Environmental Governance (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2004).
  • Keith, David, Peter Irvine, et al. "Governance of the Deployment of Solar Geoengineering." Harvard Project on Climate Agreements, February 2019.
  • Weart, Spencer, The discovery of global warming (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2003); see also: https://history.aip.org/climate/index.htm

Contact

Faculté des sciences économiques et de gestion (FSEG)

61, avenue de la Forêt Noire
67085 STRASBOURG CEDEX
0368852178

Formulaire de contact

Responsable

Matthias Dorries