ENVS258 - Extreme Heat: White Nationalism in the Age of Climate Change

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
Extreme Heat: White Nationalism in the Age of Climate Change
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
401
Section ID
ENVS258401
Meeting times
M 02:00 PM-05:00 PM
Instructors
Anne K Berg
Description
The Amazon is burning. The glaciers are melting. Heat waves, hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, wildfires, and droughts devastate ever larger swaths of the earth, producing crop failures, air pollution, soil erosion, famine and terrifying individual hardship. At the same, time the so-called Western World is literally walling itself off from the millions who are fleeing from disaster and war with what little they can carry. White militants chant "blood and soil" and "Jews will not replace us," social media spreads memes and talking points about "white genocide" and "white replacement" and online ideologues fantasize about building white ethnostates. Are these developments connected? Is there a causal relationship? Or are these conditions purely coincidental? Increasingly, arguments about limits to growth, sustainability, development and climate change have come to stand in competitive tension with arguments for social and racial equality. Why is that case? What are the claims and underlying anxieties that polarize western societies? How do white nationalist movements relate to populist and fascist movements in the first half of the 20th century? What is new and different about them now? What is the relationship between environmentalism, rightwing populism and the climate crisis? And how have societies responded to the climate crisis, wealth inequality, finite resources and the threat posed by self-radicalizing white nationalist groups?
Course number only
258
Cross listings
HIST258401
Use local description
No

ENVS245 - Petrosylvania: Reckoning with Fossil Fuel

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
Petrosylvania: Reckoning with Fossil Fuel
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
401
Section ID
ENVS245401
Meeting times
W 02:00 PM-05:00 PM
Instructors
Jared Farmer
Description
Fossil fuel powered the making--now the unmaking--of the modern world. As the first fossil fuel state, Pennsylvania led the United States toward an energy-intensive economy, a technological pathway with planetary consequences. The purpose of this seminar is to perform a historical accounting--and an ethical reckoning--of coal, oil, and natural gas. Specifically, students will investigate the histories and legacies of fossil fuel in connection to three entities: the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the City of Philadelphia, and the University of Pennsylvania. Under instructor guidance, students will do original research, some of it online, much the rest of it in archives, on and off campus, in and around Philadelphia. Philly-based research may also involve fieldwork. While based in historical sources and methods, this course intersects with business, finance, policy, environmental science, environmental engineering, urban and regional planning, public health, and social justice. Student projects may take multiple forms, individual and collaborative, from traditional papers to data visualizations prepared with assistance from the Price Lab for Digital Humanities. Through their research, students will contribute to a multi-year project that will ultimately be made available to the public.
Course number only
245
Cross listings
HIST245401
Use local description
No

ENVS150 - Water Worlds

Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
Water Worlds
Term
2020C
Syllabus URL
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
401
Section ID
ENVS150401
Meeting times
TR 01:30 PM-03:00 PM
Instructors
Sibel Sayili-HurleySimon J Richter
Description
As a result of climate change, the world that will take shape in the course of this century will be decidedly more inundated with water than we're accustomed to. The polar ice caps are melting, glaciers are retreating, ocean levels are rising, polar bear habitat is disappearing, countries are jockeying for control over a new Arctic passage, while low-lying cities and small island nations are confronting the possibility of their own demise. Catastrophic flooding events are increasing in frequency, as are extreme droughts. Hurricane-related storm surges,tsunamis, and raging rivers have devastated regions on a local and global scale. In this seminar we will turn to the narratives and images that the human imagination has produced in response to the experience of overwhelming watery invasion, from Noah to New Orleans. Objects of analysis will include mythology, ancient and early modern diluvialism, literature, art, film, and commemorative practice. The basic question we'll be asking is: What can we learn from the humanities that will be helpful for confronting the problems and challenges caused by climate change and sea level rise?
Course number only
150
Cross listings
GRMN150401, CIMS150401, COML151401
Use local description
No

ENVS091 - Sustainable Development and Culture in Latin America

Activity
SEM
Title (text only)
Sustainable Development and Culture in Latin America
Term
2020C
Subject area
ENVS
Section number only
401
Section ID
ENVS091401
Meeting times
MW 02:00 PM-03:30 PM
Instructors
Teresa Gimenez
Description
This interdisciplinary course exposes students to the three dimensions of sustainable development -environmental, economic, and social- through an examination of three products -peyote, coca, and coffee- that are crucial in shaping modern identity in areas of Latin America. The course integrates this analysis of sustainable development in relation to cultural sustainability and cultural practices associated with peyote, coca, and coffee and their rich, traditional heritage and place in literature, film, and the arts.
Course number only
091
Cross listings
SPAN091401, ANTH091401, LALS091401
Use local description
No

GEOL130 - THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT

Status
C
Activity
LEC
Title (text only)
THE MARINE ENVIRONMENT
Term session
0
Term
2020A
Subject area
GEOL
Section number only
050
Section ID
GEOL130050
Description
The oceans cover over 2/3 of the Earth's surface. This course introduces basic oceanographic concepts such as plate tectonics, marine sediments, physical and chemical properties of seawater, ocean circulation, air-sea interactions, waves, tides, nutrient cycles in the ocean, biology of the oceans, and environmental issues related to the marine environment.


Course number only
130
Cross listings
    Use local description
    No

    GEOL750 - TOPICS IN EARTH SCIENCE

    Status
    O
    Activity
    SEM
    Title (text only)
    TOPICS IN EARTH SCIENCE
    Term session
    0
    Term
    2020A
    Subject area
    GEOL
    Section number only
    301
    Section ID
    GEOL750301
    Meeting times
    T 0600PM-0800PMF 0300PM-0400PM
    Meeting location
    HAYDEN HALL 256HAYDEN HALL 358
    Instructors
    FRANCISCO, JOSEPH
    Description
    This course will use the weekly EES seminar series to survey historic breakthrogh papers or topics in the earth sciences, as well as modern papers - written by the seminar speakers - that often put the classics in perspective. Graduate students (Ph.D. only) in the Department of Earth and Environmental Science will engage in the material through reading, presentation, and discussion. The course has several goals. (1.) To engender an understanding and appreciation of major breakthroughs in our field. (2.) To develop skills in presenting and discussing scientific results. And (3.) to refine students' understanding of what constitutes great science.


    Course number only
    750
    Cross listings
      Use local description
      No

      GEOL699 - PROJECT DESIGN

      Status
      O
      Activity
      SEM
      Title (text only)
      PROJECT DESIGN
      Term session
      0
      Term
      2020A
      Subject area
      GEOL
      Section number only
      690
      Section ID
      GEOL699690
      Meeting times
      T 0600PM-0900PM
      Meeting location
      DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB A5
      Instructors
      BORDEAUX, YVETTE
      Description
      This course is designed to prepare Master of Science in Applied Geosciences students to undertake their Project Design exercise. In this course, we discuss how to identify an appropriate research project, how to design a research plan, and how to prepare a detailed proposal. By the end of the course, each student is expected to have completed a Project Design proposal.


      Course number only
      699
      Cross listings
        Use local description
        No

        GEOL680 - Interpretation of Near-surface Geologic Structure for Engineering and Envir

        Status
        O
        Activity
        LEC
        Title (text only)
        Interpretation of Near-surface Geologic Structure for Engineering and Envir
        Term session
        0
        Term
        2020A
        Subject area
        GEOL
        Section number only
        690
        Section ID
        GEOL680690
        Meeting times
        R 0600PM-0900PM
        Meeting location
        DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB A5
        Instructors
        FREED, CHAD
        Description
        The course introduces the basic principles of structural geology and their applications to engineering and environmental site characterization. Includes the mechanisms for the deformation and failure of the earth's crust, folded and faulted structures, and the orthogonal and stereographic solutions to characterize near-surface geologic structure. It also includes the construction and interpretation of geologic maps, geologic cross sections and block diagrams. Emphasis is placed on the graphical representation of subsurface data, including the use of selected computer programs, and the integration of the data to solve problems encountered in engineering and environmental projects.


        Course number only
        680
        Cross listings
          Use local description
          No

          GEOL668 - GEOMECHANICS: FLUIDS

          Status
          X
          Activity
          LEC
          Title (text only)
          GEOMECHANICS: FLUIDS
          Term session
          0
          Term
          2020A
          Subject area
          GEOL
          Section number only
          690
          Section ID
          GEOL668690
          Meeting times
          CANCELED
          Instructors
          DUDA, GEORGE
          Description
          Static and Dynamic mechanical properties of fluid in earth materials, as applied to the Hydrologic Sciences; Principles of Fluid Mechanics and Hydraulics applied to open channel flow in earth materials; flow through gates, weirs, spillways, and culverts; Applications of Darcy's Law to subsurface flow and seepage.


          Course number only
          668
          Cross listings
            Use local description
            No

            GEOL661 - Environmental Groundwater Hydrology

            Status
            O
            Activity
            LEC
            Title (text only)
            Environmental Groundwater Hydrology
            Term session
            0
            Term
            2020A
            Subject area
            GEOL
            Section number only
            690
            Section ID
            GEOL661690
            Meeting times
            M 0500PM-0800PM
            Meeting location
            DAVID RITTENHOUSE LAB 3C4
            Instructors
            MASTROPAOLO, CARL
            Description
            This course is designed to introduce the major definitions and concepts regarding groundwater flow and contaminant transport. The theory and underlying concepts, including mathematical derivations of governing equations used to model groundwater flow and contaminant transport, will be discussed and applications to environmental problems addressed. Upon completion of this course, students should expect to have acquired the skills necessary to pursue course work in flow and transport numerical and analytical modeling.


            Course number only
            661
            Cross listings
              Use local description
              No