Admission
This course is open to the students of the Bachelor in Heritage and Society (Archeology).
Please also see the "Registration" instruction below.
Language of Instruction
Lectures are taught in English.
Examination (assignment and exam) will be held in English.
Description
Economy and Ecology introduces students to anthropological perspectives on the relationship between political economy and the environment. Ethnographers have long argued that “nature” and “culture”—including the cultural products and systems we label economic—are not discrete spheres but tightly interwoven; many peoples do not, in fact, distinguish the two at all. Accordingly, this course explores dynamic interactions between political-economic systems, environments, and human bodies in order to question dualistic thinking about nature and culture. Topics include critiques of “natural” disasters; the uneven distribution of environmental benefits and burdens along lines of gender, class, race and other categories; how political economies shape our relations with non-human life; and anthropological ways of understanding climate change. In thinking with these topics, we will explore how efforts to distinguish the natural and the cultural often work, particularly in advanced industrial economies, to legitimate social and environmental inequalities.
Learning goals
Acquire knowledge about environmental anthropology and its claims regarding the relationship between political economy and ecology
Gain insight into how the above can illuminate current social and environmental problems through topical lectures bringing them into dialogue with ethnographic case studies
Exercise in basic academic skills
Schedule
Dates and room numbers can be found on the website
Mode of instruction
Total 5 ECTS = 140 study hours (sbu)
Lectures (6 x 2 hours = 12h / 18 sbu)
Written assignment (1800 words = 24 sbu)
Literature (approx. 580 pages = 98 sbu)
Assessment method
Final (take-home) examination (100% of final mark).
The exam must be graded minimum 6,0 to complete the course; if unsatisfactory it can be re-taken a maximum of one time.
Blackboard
Blackboard will be used to announce the detailed course program including the reading list. Students can register from 2 weeks before the start of the course on Blackboard.
Literature
A selection of articles and chapters (to be accessed via the digital library): see the list on Blackboard.
Registration
Archeology students will be registered for lectures in Usis by the Student Services Centre of the Faculty of Social Sciences. NO registration is required for the mid-term exam.