Lectures
- Tuesdays, 7:35-9:30 - Room 210, Emerson Hall, Harvard Yard |
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Course Description:
This introductory course will give
students an integrated overview of the science of climate change
and an analysis of the implications of this change for patterns
of daily life in their own circumstance and around the world.
Humankind is facing an unprecedented environmental crisis of
global proportions. Scientists from across the world have issued
stark warnings about the potential disruption and destabilization
that changes in Earth’s climate will most likely cause
in the near future for the life systems upon which modern civilization
depends. The social and political implications of climate change
have begun to become apparent as local communities in widely
different parts of the world struggle to adapt to new patterns
of excessive rainfall, prolonged droughts and severe weather
events. Internationally, nation states have endeavored to forge
diplomatic agreements to help humankind cope with both the causes
and consequences of global climate change.
This course has three principal objectives. First, it
will introduce students to the science of climate change, drawing
attention to the latest research and evolving pattern of scientific
data that has emerged on climate in recent years. Second, emphasis
will be given to analyzing the social changes and adaptations
that human communities have already made and those they will
most likely to have to make as the Earth’s climate continues
to change in the coming years. Finally, specific attention will
be given to the diplomatic efforts that have been launched since
the creation of the Framework Convention on Climate Change (FCCC)
during the first world-wide Earth Summit on the environment
in Rio de Janeiro in June of 1992.
Course
Schedule
Week
2
February 10 |
| History of Climate Science |
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The Early Years |
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Week
3
February 17 |
| History of Climate Science |
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Since the 1950s |
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Week
4
February 24 |
| A 'Southern' Perspective on Climate
Change |
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Dr.
Atiq Rahman - Director,
Bangladesh Centre for Advanced Study |
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| Week
5
March 2 |
| Monitoring & Modeling: The
Ongoing Evidence |
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Dr. George
E. Clark,
Environmental Resources Librarian & Curator
of the Environmental Science and Public Policy
Archives
and
Miriam
Seltzer, Associate
Librarian, Edwin Ginn Library, Fletcher School,
Tufts University. |
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Week
6
March 9 |
| The Environmental Impact of Climate
Change -1 |
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Global and Local Water Issues, Biodiversity,
& Agricultural Systems |
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Dr.
Paul Kirshen, Research Professor,
Civil & Environmental Engineering, Tufts
University, "Climate Change
and Water Resources: Global and Local Impacts" |
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Week
7
March 16 |
| The Environmental Impact of Climate
Change - 2 |
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Pests, Disease
and Human Health |
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Week
8
March 23 |
| The Pace and Scope of Change
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& Midterm
Exam |
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Spring
Break
| Week
9
April 6 |
| Social Impact of Climate Change:
The North & The South |
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Convergent Crises
& The Sense of Grievance |
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[Note:
brief Prospectus
for Term Research Paper is Due.] |
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| Week
10
April 13 |
| Social Impact of Climate Change: |
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Political Repercussions
in an Unstable World |
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| Week
11
April 20 |
| Social Impact of Climate Change:
Lessons of the Past -- Historical
Instances of Climate Reversal |
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Dr.
Harvey Weiss, Yale University,
Professor of Anthropology & Archaeology
and Director, Tell
Leilan Project. |
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Week
12
April 27 |
| The Diplomacy of Climate Negotiations |
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From Ozone Diplomacy
to the Present |
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Week
13
May 4 |
| Technological Options and Government
Policy |
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Are Techincal
"Fixes" Possible?
What do they Cost?
Who Makes Government Policy? |
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Week
14
May 11 |
| Denial, Resistance and The Hidden
Promise Embedded in the Climate Crisis |
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Ross
Gelbspan, Author, The
Heat is On: The Climate Crisis, the Cover-Up,
the Prescription. |
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| Week
15
May 18 |
| Policy Alternatives: |
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Civil Society
Initiatives: The Greening of Institutions and
the emergence of grassroots carbon activism
- with the participation of
Michael Charney, Massachusetts
Climate Action Network; Rosalie
Anders, City Hall, Cambridge;
and Leith Sharp,
The Harvard Environmental Initiative. |
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* Course Papers Due * * |
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Week
16
May 25 |
| Summation: Where can we go from
here? |
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& Final
Exercise (see note below) |
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Climate
Change Headlines
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Course
Requirements
Requirements
for the course include completing
1)
a mid-term examination
- Tuesday, 23 March 2004
- (to count approximately 20% of the final grade):
2)
a final exercise - Tuesday,
25 May 2004 - (to count approximately 20% of
the final grade);
3)
class participation -
(including classroom participation, where possible
AND completion of all online class assignments, quizzes,
etc. - to count approximately 20% of the final grade).
and
4)
a brief Prospectus and
Final Research Term Paper
- to be submitted in writing, in class on or before
Tuesday, April 6, 2004 and
Tuesday, May 18, 2004, respectively
. [That is, a brief prospectus for this
paper must have been submitted by Tuesday,
6 April 2004, while the term
paper itself is due on Tuesday
18 May, 2004]. The Prospectus
and the Research Term Paper
will together account for approximately 40% of the
final grade.
Further guidelines on the
Midterm Exam, Final Exam, Prospectus and Research Term
Paper will be given in class and posted online when
appropriate..
N.B. For the
"Final Exam" you will have a choice to complete
it in class or online. There will be no need for distance
learners to arrange for a proctor.
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| Assigned
Reading for the Course are drawn from:
| Stephen
H. Schneider (Editor), John O. Niles (Editor), Armin
Rosencranz (Editor) |
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2002 |
Climate
Change Policy: A Survey (Washington, D.
C., Island Press, 2002). |
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| The
Unassigned, Required Reading: |
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