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ENST 305 - ECOLOGY, ECONOMICS AND ETHICS |
Novel ethical demands are being created as our world is transformed by economic globalization. Through such practices as high input agriculture and dependence upon fossil fuels, this transformation has adversely affected both global ecology and human communities. To meet the resulting ethical demands, a new ecological economics is required, one that respects the scale and carrying capacity limits of the earth's ecosystems. This new economic paradigm avoids the confusion that has attended the concept of "sustainable development," which, in creating tension between the developed and less developed nations, has fostered a worldwide debate on the meaning and content of an ethics of sustainability. In contrast, ecological economics lay the foundation for a society and communities that are sustainable economically, environmentally, and socially.
0.000 TO 4.000 Credit hours 0.000 TO 4.000 Lecture hours Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Hybrid, Lecture, Online Course Environmental Studies Department Course Attributes: SS-Sch Core-Sustainability, TS-Sch Core- SCP Category, WRITING INTENSIVE Restrictions: Must be enrolled in one of the following Levels: Undergraduate Prerequisites: FOR ENST 305 General Requirements: ( Course or Test: ENST 209 Minimum Grade of D May not be taken concurrently. ) or ( Course or Test: ENSC 103 Minimum Grade of D May not be taken concurrently. ) and ( Course or Test: CRWT 102 Minimum Grade of D May not be taken concurrently. ) |
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