***Apologies for cross-posting***

Dear colleagues,

Allow us to draw your attention to our Online PhD course on Global 
Environmental 
Governance<https://www.cec.lu.se/sites/cec.lu.se/files/global_evironm_govern_2018_syllabus.pdf>,
 taking place 19-23 October 2020.

The course is offered by the Department of Political Science at Lund University 
(Sweden) and sponsored by the ClimBEco graduate school. Due to the current 
situation the course will take place completely online this year.

The course provides in-depth insights to the actors, processes and problems of 
global environmental politics and offers both practical and theoretical 
understanding about the world of international relations. It is designed to be 
accessible for PhD students who come from a variety of disciplinary 
backgrounds. Participating in the course entitles the students to 3 ECTS, if 
they join the sessions and complete a short essay afterwards.
The course will be taught in English. Please see below for the latest draft of 
the syllabus.

If you are interested in joining, please send an email to 
nils.dro...@svet.lu.se<mailto:nils.dro...@svet.lu.se> and 
fariborz.ze...@svet.lu.se<mailto:fariborz.ze...@svet.lu.se> by 30th August at 
the very latest. The e-mail should contain

  *   Your affiliation and contact details;
  *   A short motivation statement (ca. 300 words);
  *   If you are based in Sweden, please also indicate whether you are 
affiliated with the ClimBEco graduate school (Lund / Gothenburg) or the Bolin 
Centre (Stockholm).

Places are limited and we will notify you about your acceptance by 4th 
September 2020.

We would be grateful if you could spread this to anyone you think may be 
interested.

Kind regards,
Nils Droste & Fariborz Zelli

—



PhD Course

Global Environmental Governance Today – Actors, Institutions, Complexity, 3 
ECTS credits

19-23 October 2020





1. Type of Course & General Information



The course is an interdisciplinary third-cycle course offered by the Department 
of Political Science and financed by the two-year graduate research school 
ClimBEco – Climate Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services in a changing world.



Language of instruction: English





2. Learning Outcomes

Participants will be able to accomplish the following objectives by the end of 
the course:

  1.  Identify and compare different understandings of environment, governance 
and sustainable development.
  2.  Describe and critically analyse the development of the UN environmental 
architecture.
  3.  Compare governance architectures for different environmental problems 
like climate change and biodiversity.
  4.  Distinguish different political dimensions (actors, institutions, 
interlinkages) and their relevance for the success or failure of global 
environmental politics.
  5.  Apply major theories of political science to identify and examine social 
barriers of global environmental governance.
  6.  Identify limits of and realistic options for political reform.

Achieving these objectives will be of particular benefit for students with 
career goals that include serving as a practitioner in environmental politics 
or providing policy advice and consultancy.







3. Course Content

In September 2015, the United Nations General Assembly adopted 2030 Development 
Agenda. One essential component of this agenda are the 17 Sustainable 
Development Goals with their associated 169 targets. Less than three months 
later, at the UN climate conference in Paris in 2015, countries around the 
world subscribed to staying below an average warming of 2°C and submitted 
targets to reduce their carbon footprint.

How effective will these and other ambitious targets of the international 
community be in the future, and how will regular changes in government, in the 
US and elsewhere, influence the long-term probability of meeting them? Are 
economic growth, political interest and human development compatible with 
environmental conservation? And is scientific knowledge about the state of the 
environment enough to mobilize a change in behavior? 


The course frames this dilemma of global environmental governance as a problem 
of human interaction. It starts from the premise that, in addition to natural 
and physical barriers, there are severe social and political barriers that 
often stand in the way of an effective management of transboundary 
environmental threats. In other words: political processes and actors are not 
only the target of scientific advice (science for politics), but part of the 
problem – and hence objects of examination (science of politics), e.g. due to 
underlying constellations of power and interests or behavioural norms.

Based on concepts and theories of political science, the course seeks to 
provide Ph.D. students from different disciplines with an understanding of the 
current state of global environmental governance, its underlying causes and 
possible response options. The main modules of the course are:

  *   Module 1: introducing the state of play in global environmental 
governance today (icebreaker; key concepts; development of the United Nations 
system from early 1970s until today; reform discussions);
  *   Module 2: core dimensions of global environmental governance (actors; 
institutions; overlaps with other policy fields like security, trade, health, 
development);
  *   Module 3: explaining and understanding (rationalist and constructivist 
theories; quantitative and qualitative methods; and their application).

Each of the modules above will conclude with an intensive simulation or group 
work session where students apply some of the presented concepts, theories and 
empirical information. Moreover, students will, after the end of the course, 
write short final papers in which they apply selected political theories to 
help them explain governance developments in their own field of Ph.D. research.




4. Teaching and Assessment


The course will consist of 15 sessions that will all take place in one week, 
including three interactive seminars where students engage in group work and 
simulations.

The course is particularly designed to be accessible for students from very 
different backgrounds, including different natural science disciplines. 
Therefore, the introduction of key political concepts and international 
relations theories will include some elementary aspects. Students with a more 
advanced theoretical background in political science will nonetheless benefit 
from the application of these concepts and theories in a series of simulations 
and interactive sessions.

We also ask all participants to block sufficient time in the week before the 
course begins so that they can prepare the reading material. (Further 
instructions will be sent around to registered students in due time).

Evaluation will take place on the basis of participation in the course sessions 
(required) and a short final paper of 1,500 words to be submitted about 3-4 
weeks after the end of the course. In the paper, participants will apply the 
discussed theories and concepts to their own field of research or to an 
equivalent issue of their choice.

Re-examination is offered after the conclusion of the course. If necessary, a 
second opportunity for re-examination will be arranged at a later date.



5. Grades



The grades awarded are Pass or Fail. To be awarded a Pass the student must 
fulfill the learning outcomes specified and also demonstrate an independent, 
reflective and critical approach to the research field and to the theories 
presented in the course.



6. Admission Requirements


The course is open to Ph.D. students from all disciplinary backgrounds. The 
number of participants is limited however; in case of too many applications, 
priority will be given to Ph.D. students of the ClimBEco graduate research 
school, the Bolin Centre for Climate Research, and the department of political 
science at Lund University.

Before applying (by e-mail to 
nils.dro...@svet.lu.se<mailto:nils.dro...@svet.lu.se> and 
fariborz.ze...@svet.lu.se<mailto:fariborz.ze...@svet.lu.se> by 31st August), 
please liaise with your supervisor on the acceptance of course credits in your 
programme or university.


We will notify you of your acceptance to the course by 7th September.



7. Literature

Recommended readings for preparation:
Axelrod, Regina S., and Stacy D. VanDeveer (eds.), 2019/20. The Global 
Environment: Institutions, Law, and Policy. 5th ed., Thousand Oaks, CA: CQ 
Press. Chapters 1, 2, 3, 4, 10, 12. 193 pp.
Baylis, John, Steve Smith and Patricia Owens, 2016. The Globalization of World 
Politics: an introduction to international relations. 7th ed., Oxford: Oxford 
University Press. Chapters 6, 7, 9 & 10. 51 pp.
O’Neill, Kate, 2017. The Environment and International Relations. 2nd ed., 
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. 264 pp.
Stevenson, Hayley. 2018. Global Environmental Politics. Cambridge: Cambridge 
University Press. 366 pp.

Further readings:
Betsill, Michele, Kathryn Hochstetler and Dimitris Stevis (eds.), 2014. 
Advances in International Environmental Politics. 2nd ed., London: Palgrave 
Macmillan. 424 pp.
Chasek, Pamela S., David L. Downie,  and Janet Welsh Brown, 2016. Global 
Environmental Politics. 7th ed., Boulder, CO: Westview Press. 482pp.
Morin, Jean-Frederic, Amandine Orsini, and Sikina Jinnah, 2020. Global 
Environmental Politics. Understanding the Governance of the Earth. Oxford, UK: 
Oxford University Press. 400 pp.
Nicholson, Simon, and Paul Wapner, 2014. Global Environmental Politics. From 
Person to Planet. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers. 384 pp.



-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to gep-ed+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/gep-ed/0C3BD269-27E6-4F5F-95C5-3975CED76CF6%40svet.lu.se.

Reply via email to