HIS 252 SOCIAL JUSTICE AND ENVIRONMENT

Changes to the land and ecology both shape human history and often result from human action. Conquest and colonization represent two of the most powerful forces in environmental history. Today neocolonial exploitation of resources and populations provoke bitter struggles over environmental justice across the globe, often involving gendered and racial marginalization.

Credits

4

Notes

This course may include an optional section that will meet for an additional hour each week to discuss supplemental readings in Spanish. Students participating in the foreign language section will receive one additional credit hour, pass/not passed marking.

Cross Listed Courses

This is the same course as CRE 252/ES 252/GWS 252.

Enrollment Limit

Enrollment limited to 28 students.

Attributes

A7, MOIE, W, SDP