The web site for this
course is:
http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/syllabus.html
Focus: This is an upper division course focused on the global environmental "problematique" and the ways in which it is being played out in a variety of political and policy arenas. The course is intended to provide students with insights into:
Assignments:
In addition to attendence (10% of grade) at lectures (there will
be no formal discussion sections), students must read the assigned texts
and articles listed on the syllabus below. There are several written
requirements:
Required texts
(available from Slug Books, and on reserve):
Ronnie D. Lipschutz, Global Environmental
Politics (Washington, DC: CQ Press, 2003)
Thomas Princen,
et al (eds.), Confronting Consumption (Cambridge, Mass.:
MIT Press, 2002)
Vandana Shiva, Tomorrow's Biodiversity (Thames &
Hudson, 2000)
Diane Raines
Ward, Water Wars (New York: Riverhead Books, 2002)
Jack M. Hollander, The
Real Environmental Crisis (Berkeley: UC Press, 2003). This book has not been ordered through Slug Books! You
can buy an electronic version of this book through Amazon for $10.36 at:
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B00008Z41Z/qid=1071514730/sr=12-1/104-7573725-1916755?v=glance&s=books
Other readings are
hyperlinked to the lecture topics, below. Articles may be added during
the quarter; please review this web site periodically.
Course
Syllabus:
(click on lecture
titles to access lecture notes)
Part
I: Introduction
to the course http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Pol174-w04-Part1.html
1/6: Soylent Green is People!
1/8: How might we think about global environmental politics?
Read: Lipschutz, ch. 1-2
Part
II: How many people? http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Pol174-w04-Part2.html
1/13: Demography as science and ideology
(click
here for slides--in Powerpoint) http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Population.ppt
Read: Eric B. Ross, "The Malthus Factor
Poverty, Politics and Population in Capitalist Development," The Cornerhouse
Briefing #20, 2000, at: http://cornerhouse.icaap.org/briefings/20.html
Hollander, ch. 1-3.
1/15: Malthus and his followers
Read: Thomas Malthus, "An Essay on
the Principle of Population," (1798), ch. 1, 2, 5, 7, 10, at: http://www.ac.wwu.edu/~stephan/malthus/malthus.0.html. Skim
the rest.
Browse
the Home Page of the International
Society of Malthus, at: http://desip.igc.org/malthus/
1/20: People as the ultimate resource
Read: Ed Regis,
"The
Doomslayer," Wired, Feb. 1997, at: http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/5.02/ffsimon_pr.html;
William O'Keefe, "Are
Resources Finite in a World of Unlimited Intelligence?", at: http://www.acton.org/ppolicy/environment/population/okeefe.html
Additional
Reading:
Paul Ehrlich, The Population Bomb (Sierra Club-Ballantine,
1968).
Julian Simon, The Ultimate Resource 2 (Princeton, 1996).
Part III: Consumption and Its
Discontents
Consumption
and the Environment http://www.deh.gov.au/pcepd/economics/consumption/
Toward Sustainable
Consumption (http://www.newdream.org/discuss/nas.html)
1/22: Commodity
Chains and Kipple Chains
Read: Princen, et al., ch. 1-3; Hollander, ch. 8, 11;
National
Academy of Sciences, Environmentally
Significant Consumption: Research Directions (1997), ch. 1
(http://www.nap.edu/books/0309055989/html/index.html)
See also: Some commodity
chains (http://www.lclark.edu/~soan221/97/CommodityChain.html)
Explaining Kipple
culture (http://totl.net/Kipple/index.html)
Mark Sagoff, "Do We Consume
too Much?", http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Sagoff
1/27: Hazardous
Capital and the Green Consumer
Read: Lipschutz, ch. 3; Princen, ch. 5-6
See also: Lyuba Zarsky,
"International
Investment Rules and the Environment,"
(http://www.foreignpolicy-infocus.org/briefs/vol4/v4n22env.html)
1/29: Who will rid me of these noisome
wastes?
Read: Lipschutz, ch. 5; Princen, et al., ch. 7
See also: Berndt Brickell,
"The
Norms of the Basel Convention" (http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/envjust/papers/allpapers/brikell/home.htm)
Zada Lipman, "Trade
In Hazardous Waste: Environmental Justice Versus Economic Growth" (http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/envjust/papers/allpapers/lipman/home.htm)
Tony Dias, "The
Disaster and Its aftermath: The Hiroshima of the Chemical Industry"
(http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/envjust/papers/allpapers/dias/home.htm)
Tara McGee, "Justice
Dimensions of Environmental Contamination in Industry-Dependent Communities"
(http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/envjust/papers/allpapers/mcgee/home.htm)
Part IV: The Struggle for Nature
2/3: Who owns
knowledge? TRIPS and the enclosure of the intellectual commons
Read: Shiva, "Introduction," ch. 1; Hollander,
ch. 4; Markku Oksanen, "Privatising
Genetic Resources: Biodiversity Preservation and Intellectual Property
Rights" (http://www.arbld.unimelb.edu.au/envjust/papers/allpapers/oksanen/home.htm)
Of potential interest: Peter J. Bryant, Biodiversity and Conservation http://darwin.bio.uci.edu/~sustain/bio65/Titlpage.htm#Table of contents). See chapter 7.
Convention on International Trade
in Endangered Species (CITES) http://www.cites.org/
Convention on Biodiversity
(CBD) (http://www.biodiv.org/doc/)
Codex Alimentarius
Commission www.codexalimentarius.net/
2/5: The valorization
of genetic diversity and the GMO problem
Read: Shiva, ch. 3-4; Ross, ch. 6-7; Barbara Adams, et
al, "The Politics
of GM
Food," at: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/Units/gec/gecko/gec-gm-f.pdf
See also:
Transgenic
food articles (http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/pol174/Transgenic%20foods.html)
Martin Teitel, "Unsafe at Any Seed?" Forum
for Applied Research and Public Policy v15, n3 (Fall, 2000):40.
Les Levidow & Susan Carr, "Sound Science
or Ideology?" Forum for Applied Research and Public Policy v15,
n3 (Fall, 2000):44.
Nigel J. Taylor & Claude M. Fauquet,
"Biotechnology's Greatest Challenge." Forum for Applied Research
and Public Policy v15, n3 (Fall,
2000):51.
2/10: Fate
of the Forests (http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Pol174-w04-Part5.html)
(click here
for Powerpoint presentation) http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Forests1.ppt
Read:
Peter J. Bryant, Biodiversity
and Conservation ch. 10.
http://darwin.bio.uci.edu/~sustain/bio65/Titlpage.htm#Table
of contents
FAO (Food and
Agriculture Organisation). 2001. State of the
World’s Forests 2001 at: ftp://ftp.fao.org/docrep/fao/003/y0900e/y0900e00.pdf
World Commission
on Forests and Sustainable Development, Our Forests, Our Future--Summary Report (1999), at: http://www.iisd.org/pdf/wcfsdsummary.pdf
2/12: Is sustainable forestry possible?
Read:
Ronnie D. Lipschutz,
"Environmental Regulation, Certification,
and Corporate Standards: A Critique," at: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Lipschutz%20Forest%20paper.pdf
Earl E. Meidinger.
2002. “Forest Certification as Environmental
Law Making by Global Civil Society,” pp. 293-329, in: E. Meidinger,
C. Elliott and G. Oesten (eds.), Social and Political Dimensions of Forest
Certification,
Remagen-Oberwinter, Germany: www.forstbuch.de , at: http://law.buffalo.edu/homepage/eemeid/scholarship/FCGCSLaw.pdf
See also:
Forest Conservation
Portal, at: http://forests.org/
Rainforest Action
Network, at: http://www.ran.org/
Part IVa: Something is in the Air (http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Pol174-w04-Part6.html)
2/24: The air,
the air is everywhere
Read: Hollander,
ch. 5, 7; IPCC, "Summary
for Policymakers," Climate Change 2001
Synthesis Report, at: http://www.ipcc.ch/pub/un/syreng/spm.pdf
Detlef Sprinz and Urs
Luterbacher, "International
Relations and Global Climate Change,"
http://www.pik-potsdam.de/dept/soc/e/reports/pr21_1.htm
See also:
UNEP, "Vital Climate
Graphics," at: http://www.grida.no/climate/vital/
Browse the World Resources Institute Climate Pages at http://www.wri.org/climate/index.html
Read: Hermann
E. Ott, "Climate change:
an important foreign policy issue," International Affairs 77,
2 (2001):277-96, at:http://www.wupperinst.org/download/Int-Affairs-Ott.pdf
Surage Dessai, "The
Climate Regime from the Hague to Marrakech: Saving or Sinking the Kyoto
Protocol?" Tyndall Center for Climate Change Research, Working Paper
12, at: http://www.tyndall.ac.uk/publications/working_papers/wp12.pdf
See
also:
Anil Agarwal, "Making
the Kyoto Protocol Work: Ecological and economic effectivness, and equity
in the climate regime," at: http://www.cseindia.org/html/eyou/climate/pdf/cse_stat.pdf
David G. Victor, "Enforcing
International Law: Implications for an Effective Global Warming Regime,"
Duke Environmental Law and Policy Forum 10, at: http://www.law.duke.edu/shell/cite.pl?10+Duke+Envtl.+L.+&+Pol'y+F.+147
Part IVb: Something is in the Water
http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Pol174-w04-Part7.html
3/2: Water wars?
Read: Ward, ch 1-4; Hollander, ch. 6; Marq de Villiers, "Water Wars of the Near Future,"
at: http://www.itt.com/waterbook/Wars.asp;
Joyce
Starr, "Water Wars," Foreign Policy 82 (Spring): 17-36, at: http://www.ciesin.org/docs/006-304/006-304.html
See also:
Peter
Gleick, "The Changing
Water Paradigm: A Look at Twenty-first Century Water Resources Development,"
Water International, Volume 25, Number 1, Pages 127-138, March 2000,
at: http://www.iwra.siu.edu/win/win2000/win03-00/gleick.pdf
3/4: Water for sale?
(Ben Crow's "Gender
and Water" presentation: http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Gender&WaterTalk.ppt)
Read:
Ward, ch 5-epilogue; Clay Landry & Terry Anderson,
"The Rising Tide of Water
Markets," at: http://www.itt.com/waterbook/tide.asp;
Jack Moss, Gary Wolff, Graham Gladden & Eric Guttieriez,
"Valuing
Water for Better Governance" (10 March 2003), at:
http://www.pacinst.org/reports/valuing_water/valuing_water_paper.pdf
3/9: The
Nature & Prospects of the Global Environmental Problematique http://ic.ucsc.edu/~rlipsch/Pol174.w04/Pol174-w04-Part%208.html
Read:
Lipschutz, ch. 4,6; Hollander, ch. 9, 10, 12, 13