Spring 2008
Katrina
B. Lee Lindner, Department of Physics and Astronomy
The first half of the course will cover the physics of hurricanes, and Hurricane Katrina in particular. The
second half of the course will feature guest lecturers presenting
perspectives of Hurricane Katrina from a variety of
viewpoints. Katrina survivors Dean Cynthia Lowenthal, Prof. Sorin Oprisan, and Prof.
Ana Oprisan will guest lecture, as will Prof. Brigit Doyle
(Levee failure), Frank Alsheimer (NWS), Diana Klein (Chief Program Officer
of the American Red Cross
for Gulf Coast recovery) and Dave
Williams (ABC News). Students will also research Katrina and give short oral
presentations and write papers.
Spring
2007
Ecological Economics
Professor Calvin Blackwell, Department of Economics and Finance
Ecological Economics is a new and
growing field, described as "the transdisciplinary study of the human
economy as part of nature's economy." It incorporates economics,
philosophy and the natural sciences to examine some of humanity's most
pressing environmental issues. In this seminar we will use some of the
tools of these fields to examine issues like sustainable development,
natural resource management, and valuing the environment and
biodiversity.
Spring
2006
Blue Holes: Policy and the
Environment
Professor Stephanie Schwabe, Department of Geology, adjunct
This course will provide students with an integrated view of the
problems, both envrionmental and social, that face the subsurface and
fresh water environments of the Bahamas today. This will be
accomplished first through detailed examination of the geography and
geology of the Bahamas, including how they form and what they describe
about the subterranean environment. In addition
commonwealth and international law as it applies to human rights will
be studied.
Spring
2005
Transportation &
Eco-Justice
Professor Deborah McCarthy, Sociology Department
This course will provide a survey of the literature on the interactions between society and the environment with a particular focus on transportation. Students will build on this literature to conduct their own sociological assessment of the pressing and unique transportation issues, policies, and planning in the Charleston metropolitan area.
Spring
2004
Water Resources: Waste Not, Want Not
Professor Timothy Callahan, Department of Geology
The non-fiction book "Cadillac Desert: The American West and Its Disappearing Water" by Marc Reisner is an account of the development of the western U.S. The expansion of cities such as Los Angeles, Phoenix, and Las Vegas transpired in large part due to the water projects by the US Bureau of Reclamation on rivers such as the Colorado, Snake, Green, and Columbia, among others. Reisner's book was originally published in 1986, and in this seminar we will reflect on his predictions of water use, population change, etc. We will also read a more recent publication by Robert Glennon entitled, "Water Follies: Groundwater Pumping and the Fate of America's Fresh Waters" which describes the effects intensive groundwater pumping projects can have on fragile ecosystems in streams, lakes, and wetlands. The average US citizen consumes more water than ten citizens of any other country; students will be asked to document and comment on water usage in their own daily routine to understand their impact on this precious global resource.
Spring 2003
The Skeptical Environmentalist
Professor Calvin Blackwell, Economics Department
Most people think the quality of the environment is poor and getting worse. In a recent book, The Skeptical Environmentalist, author Bjorn Lomborg questions this belief. He boldly attempts to show that in fact the environment has been improving, not declining. In this seminar we will examine his controversial ideas and try to take some measure of the overall health of the environment. "This is one of the most valuable books on public policy - not merely on environmental policy - to have been written for the intelligent reader in the past ten years… The Skeptical Environmentalist is a triumph.." The Economist "The problem with Lomborg's conclusion is that the scientists themselves disavow it. Many spoke to us at Scientific American about their frustration at what they described as Lomborg's misrepresentation of their fields" from "Misleading Math about the Earth," Scientific American
Spring 2002
Energy and the Environment
Professor Frank Kinard, Department of Chemistry
Spring 2001
Environmental Audit of the College of
Charleston
Professor Tracy Burkett, Department of Sociology
For results see: http://www.cofc.edu/~burkettt/audit.htm