Admission requirements
Required course(s):
None.
Description
Are you interested in how environmental change is defined and experienced across the world within a variety of contexts? Do you agree that it is important to think globally and act locally? Are you curious about the historical context of today's environmental inequalities? Are you curious about the ecological basis of revolution and crises? Have you always wanted to study the environment from a humanities and social sciences perspective? Political Ecology is a thriving field of studies and research, with presence in most universities across the globe. This highly interdisciplinary course offers an introduction to the field: its theory, practice, ethics, and positionality. At the same time, it does not seek to be contextualised within rigid categorisations of (inter) disciplinary identity, knowledge and/or analysis. Instead, it opens up to a variety of, both academic and non-academic, perspectives and approaches to the study and analysis of contemporary socioenvironmental issues, in conversation with a variety of regions and networks of knowledge. This course goes beyond nature and society as variables of analysis, disparate and opposed, to suggest that nature and society can no longer be instituionalised, conceptualised and communicated as disparate and clearly delineated realms but rather as mutually constitutive notions. In this course, lecturer and students will discuss a variety of topics such as pandemics, migration, crises, revolution, conflict, waste, racism and sustainability by critically approaching their ecological basis and impact. From ecofeminism to queer ecology, a strong component of this course is the relevance of local and translocal theory across the world, but the diversity of indigenous environmental theory will not be presented in opposition and/ or in contrast to so-called ‘Western environmental knowledge’ as this course seeks to decentre Eurocentrism. As mentioned earlier, this course challenges and unsettles conceptual, theoretical, and practical binaries that situate environmental epistemic diversity in decontextualised analyses. No prior knowledge is required for this course. However, openness to new angles and perspectives which can help us confront our own biases is required.
Course Objectives
After successful completion of this course, students are able to:
Knowledge:
Depart from existing knowledges and include new perspectives and approaches to critically inform their opinions.
Describe, discuss, and think critically about key debates and perspectives concerning the political ecology of a variety of topics: crisis, migration, activism, environmental theory, etc.
Assess the interrelatedness and mutually constitutive nature of politics and ecology in a variety of contexts across the world.
Construct and critically develop their own arguments as a response to urgent socioenvironmental matters in the world.
Critically situate scholarship and deconstruct biases (both personal and professional) and power relations that have also played an important role in defining and developing fields like environmental studies, ecology, geography, and anthropology.
Broaden knowledge of ‘the environment’ by bringing perspectives and paradigms from the social sciences and humanities into existing knowledge stemming from the natural sciences.
Academically engage with the environmental theory of non-academic contexts and contribute to the advancement of epistemic diversity.
Skills:
Analise academic literature pertaining to the themes discussed in the weekly seminars.
Formulate original arguments, in discussion and in writing, question and write an academic essay on a subject of choosing related to the course content.
Communicating opinions in an academic manner and with the assistance of existing relevant literature.
Assess the validity and reliability of research and literary sources beyond the politics of institutionalising knowledge.
Critically approach contemporary issues and the constitutive biases of primary and secondary sources, as well as media sources.
Use innovative formats (such as podcasts and performances) to communicate the outcomes of their assignments.
Collaborate with existing local environmental organisations and initiatives.
Timetable
Timetables for courses offered at Leiden University College in 2022-2023 will be published on this page of the e-Prospectus.
Mode of instruction
The course is conducted in seminar-style meetings, which will take place twice a week. This requires thorough preparation through the study of the compulsory readings and active engagement on the part of the students. Every week, students will need to complete compulsory readings and complete these with suggested further readings. In addition, they will have to show critical engagement with the readings by bringing a short summary of the readings to class. Class meetings will include short lectures, moderated plenary, and group discussions led and moderated by students. The attendance of classes is compulsory. Absences will follow the coronavirus absence policy stated below. For those missing more than 2 sessions: half a mark per extra absence will be discounted from the final grade. Those missing more than 50% of the course will have to submit reflective commentary on the readings from the sessions they had missed. Special arrangements can be made in communication with the instructor.
Assessment Method
First, every week, students will introduce and moderate A DEBATE (during the first or second half of our session). Two students per session, four students per week. They will liaise to introduce the main ideas of the day’s readings and connect these to daily life during the subsequent discussion. The debate will start with a brief introduction of no more than 10 minutes (the use of supporting visual material is requested: e.g., one or two slides, posters, photos, videos) to, then, open the floor to the class. This will be organised with the course convener during the first week of the course (25%).
Second, in groups of 4, students will collaborate with a local environmental initiative and produce a CHALLENGES PODCAST (of no more than 30 minutes) focusing on a socioenvironmental topic of interest, as approached from the perspectives of Political Ecology and the work of the organization they have collaborated with (35%). A list of friendly organisations will be provided at the beginning of the course, but students are also welcome to suggest other relevant organisations in the area.
Third, students are required to write a final REFLECTIVE ESSAY of 3000 words (excluding references/bibliography) further developing any of the topics and/or queries from the debate they had moderated in class (or, after consultation, a different topic) (40%). This piece of writing can draw from moderated topics and discussions and/or the contents of your challenges podcast.
Reading list
Students will be informed via Brightspace.
Registration
Courses offered at Leiden University College (LUC) are usually only open to LUC students and LUC exchange students. Leiden University students who participate in one of the university’s Honours tracks or programmes may register for one LUC course, if availability permits. Registration is coordinated by the Education Coordinator, course.administration@luc.leidenuniv.nl.
Contact
Dr. Elena Burgos Martinez, e.e.burgos.martinez@hum.leidenuniv.nl
Remarks
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