Course Catalog 2005-2006

College of Arts and Sciences

Environmental Studies

Len Broberg , Director

The Environmental Studies Program (EVST) seeks to provide students with the literacy, skills and commitment needed to foster a healthy natural environment and to create a more sustainable, equitable, and peaceful world. To these ends, the EVST program educates and challenges students to become knowledgeable, motivated, and engaged in environmental affairs. We want our students to acquire the skills and awareness that will enable them to promote positive social change and to improve the environment and communities of Montana and thereby the lives of all Montanans. Our program is organized upon the following principles:

-Environmental studies require an interdisciplinary approach that integrates the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities.

-Creating solutions to environmental problems requires enterprise and performance as well as reflection; therefore, an effective environmental education generates thinkers who can do as well as doers who can think.

-It is important to provide both classroom and experiential learning opportunities in the arts and responsibilities of democratic citizenship, including communication, collaboration, and committed civic participation.

-Students should be co-creators of their educational experience.

High School Preparation: Students in high school who are planning to major in environmental studies should take their schools ' college preparatory curriculum. Courses in biology, chemistry, math through pre-calculus, and writing are recommended.

Special Degree Requirements

Refer to graduation requirements listed previously in the catalog (see index). For the Bachelor of Arts degree, every major in environmental studies will complete the following requirements:

Environmental Studies: EVST 101N, 167H, 201, 225, 360, 398, one of the following two courses, 302 or 367and one of the following two courses 305L or 420 and at least 12 credits selected from 300 and/or 400 level courses offered by EVST.

Required courses outside Environmental Studies: BIOL 100N or 101N or 103N; CHEM 151N; MATH 241.

The Upper-division Writing Expectation must be met by successfully completing an upper-division writing course from the approved list in the Academic Policies and Procedures section of this catalog. See index.

Special Areas of Study

Students are encouraged to select a minor or double major from another campus discipline or to focus in on of the following areas of study:

Environmental Management: In addition to satisfying the general requirements for a degree in environmental studies, students desiring environmental management must complete ACCT 201, ACCT 202, BADM 257, IS 270, FIN 322, MGMT 340S, IS 341, MKTG 360, and MGMT 445 or MGMT 446 or IS 448.

Environmental Writing and Literature: In addition to satisfying the general requirements for a degree in environmental studies, students desiring to focus in this area must complete EVST 305L and EVST 373A; at least one 3 credit course at the 200-level or above in either ENCR or ENLT or JOUR; at least one internship credit with either Camas magazine, the Environmental Writing Institute, Wild Mercy reading series, or some other environmental publication; and at least one independent study credit (EVST 496) in either original nature writing or in nature literature study.

Pre-Law: In addition to satisfying the general requirements for a degree in environmental studies, students desiring to focus in environmental law must consult with the pre-law faculty advisor within environmental studies to design a suitable pre-law program. The pre-law study area is a flexible program designed to prepare students for law school and allow students to strengthen their background within their area of interest.

Sustainable Food and Farming: In addition to satisfying the general requirements for a degree in environmental studies, students desiring to focus in this area must complete: 6 supervised internship credits in the Program in Ecological Agriculture and Society (PEAS, EVST 390); EVST 430 (2 cr.); and EVST 450 (3 cr.). In addition, students must complete 9 credits of advisor-approved courses or internships. (Could include such courses as: FOR 210N, 362, 424; HHP 236N; PHAR 324; ANTH 387; GEOG 405.)

Water Resources: In addition to satisfying the general requirements for a degree in environmental studies, student desiring to focus in water resources must complete 20 credits of advisor-approved courses or internships. (Could include such courses as BIOL 366, 453, 454; GEOL 320, 431, 480; FOR 210N, 389, 415, 485, 486.) Note: some of these courses require prerequisites not in the environmental studies core requirements.

Suggested Course of Study

First Year A S
BIOL 100N The Science of Life 3 -
ENEX 101 Composition (3) (3)
EVST 101N Environmental Science 3 -
EVST 167H Nature and Society - 3
MATH 117 Probability and Linear Mathematics - 3
UNC 180 Environmental Studies Freshman Interest Group Seminar 1 -
Elective and General Education 6-9 7-10
Total 16 16
 
Second Year A S
CHEM 151N General and Inorganic Chemistry 3 -
EVST 201 Environmental Information Resources - 3
EVST 225 Community and Environment 3 -
MATH 241 Statistics 4 -
Electives and General Education 6 12
Total 16 15
 
Third Year A S
EVST 302 Introduction to Environmental Regulation - 3
EVST 360 Applied Ecology 3 -
EVST 367 Environmental Politics and Policies 3 -
EVST 420 US Environmental Movement 3 -
EVST upper-division courses 3 3
Electives and General Education 3 9
Total 15 15
 
Fourth Year A S
EVST upper-division course 3 -
EVST 398 Cooperative Education 3 -
Electives and General Education 8 14
Total 14 14

Requirements for a Minor

To earn a minor the student must complete 25 credits. The following courses must be completed: EVST 101N, 167H, 225 and one of these ecology courses: BIOL 121N, EVST 360, FOR 330, or BIOL 340. The remaining credits can be from any other upper-division EVST courses.

Courses

U =' for undergraduate credit only, UG = for undergraduate or graduate credit, G= for graduate credit. R after the credit indicates the course may be repeated for credit to the maximum indicated after the R. Credits beyond this maximum do not count toward a degree.

Environmental Studies (EVST)

U 101N Environmental Science 3 cr. Offered autumn. An introduction to the scientific principles that underpin environmental science and discussion of how these shape national and local environmental laws and policies. Features local approaches to solving environmental problems.

U 167H Nature and Society 3 cr. Offered spring. The relationship between ideas about nature and the development of political and social ideas, institutions, and practices, primarily in western (Euro-American) society. Complements ethics offerings in philosophy aimed at environmental studies majors.

U 195 Special Topics Variable cr. (R-6) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.

U 201 Environmental Information Resources 3 cr. Offered spring. Students learn to conduct comprehensive literature research, analyze sources critically and write a research paper on a current environmental issue. Focus on critical thinking and communication.

U 204 Sustainable Economic Development 3 cr. Offered intermittently autumn or spring. Prereq., EVST 167H. Review of the concept of sustainability in the context of the current American economic system and the extant applications of sustainability principles to private enterprise.

U 225 Community and Environment 3 cr. Offered autumn. Same as SOC 225. Exploration of the ways that communities address their environmental concerns. Introduction of relevant social science concepts.

U 294 Seminar 1-6 cr. (R-6) Offered intermittently.

U 295 Special Topics Variable cr. (R-9) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.

U 302 Introduction to Environmental Regulation 3 cr. Offered spring. Introduction to the history, law and theory of environmental regulation in the United States using public and private land regulation mechanisms as case studies. Basic principles of constitutional and administrative law relevant to environmental regulation, substantive public and private land use law and the history of environmental problems and their regulation.

U 305L The Environmental Vision 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., EVST 167H, environmental studies major, or consent of instr. Provides background, overview, interpretations, and understanding of key concepts, themes, approaches, and forms in American nature and environmental nonfiction as well as that literature's response to and influence on environmental events, figures, and movements.

U 327E Environmental Ethics I3 cr. Offered autumn. Same as PHIL 327E. Critical exploration of selected philosophical and literary texts pertinent to the ethics of human relationships with the natural environment. Issues parallel to those in EVST 427E, but presented in a manner available to those without prior experience in philosophy. Credit not allowed for both EVST/PHIL 327E and EVST/PHIL 427E.

UG 360 Applied Ecology 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., BIOL 100N, CHEM 151N, EVST 201, MATH 241. Understanding the principles and concepts of ecology and how they inform real life decisions about human interactions with the environment. Emphasis on case studies, field study design and conservation of watersheds and biodiversity.

UG 367 Environmental Politics and Policies 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., EVST 167H or consent of instr. Environmentalism as social movement, political and electoral issue. Focus is domestic illustrated by case studies.

UG 371 Wilderness Issues Lecture Series 1 cr. (R-3) Offered spring. Same as RECM 371. Explores current issues in wilderness preservation, management and research.

U 373A Nature Works 3 cr. Offered spring. Prereq., EVST 305L and/or consent of instr. Writing workshop for the creation, critique, and revision of essays about the environment to include natural history, personal narrative, science interpretation, advocacy/editorial, place-based essay, and others. Examination of concepts, forms, and approaches to writing about environmental concerns, awareness and sensitivity. Reading and responding to published work, primarily from the perspective of technique and approach.

U 377 Rhetoric, Nature and Environmentalism 3 cr. Offered intermittently. Same as COMM 377. Survey of rhetorical texts that shape public understanding of nature and environmental issues. Analysis of a range of historical and contemporary environmental texts using theoretical concepts from the rhetorical tradition.

U 390 Supervised InternshipPEAS Variable cr. (R-8) Offered every term. Prereq., consent of instr. Program in Ecological Agriculture and Society (PEAS).

U 395 Special Topics Variable cr. (R-12) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.

U 398 Cooperative Education Experience Variable cr. (R-12) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., six credits in EVST and consent of instr. Practical application of classroom learning through internship with governments, organizations or industry.

UG 420 The U.S. Environmental Movement 3 cr. Offered autumn. Study of the environmental movement as a social movement. Examination of different approaches to environmental protection and restoration in view of the movement ' s historical roots and contemporary debates.

UG 427E Environmental Ethics II 3 cr. Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., lower-division course in Perspective 5 or consent of instr. Same as PHIL 427E. Critical exploration of selected philosophical and literary texts pertinent to the ethics of human relationships with the natural environment. Issues parallel to those in EVST 327E, but considered from a more philosophically sophisticated perspective. Credit not allowed for both EVST/PHIL 327E and EVST/PHIL 427E.

U 430 Culture and Agriculture 2 cr. Offered spring, from start of semester to mid-April. Surveys treatment of farmers and farming in the humanities. Course covers specific agricultural crops and their effect on social and environmental history, artistic commentary on agricultural life and farmer philosophy. Themes range from the tea and opium wars, to Wendell Berry ' s poetry to David Orr ' s philosophy.

UG 432 The Human Role in Environmental Change. 3 cr. Offered autumn even-numbered years. Prereq., upper-division standing or graduate standing. Same as GEOG 432. A systematic examination of the ways in which the major physical systems and ecosystems of the earth have been modified by human activity, and approaches to the rehabilitation of these systems.

UG 440 Environmental Economics 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., ECON 111S, 112S or consent of instr. Same as ECON 440. Outlines a theoretical framework for the analysis of environmental problems, including concepts of market failure and externalities, materials balance and property rights. The policy implications of this analytical model are explored for a range of topics including pollution and the preservation of natural environments and species.

UG 450 Food, Agriculture, and Environment 3 cr. Offered spring. Exploration of the premise that agricultural sustainability requires practices, policies, and social arrangements that balance concerns of environmental soundness, economic viability, and social justice among all sectors of society.

UG 465 Restoration Ecology 3 cr. Offered spring. Prereq., senior standing and a course in ecology. Same as FOR 465. Philosophy and practice of restoring damaged ecosystems. Restoration planning including improvement of degraded soils, site preparation for revegetation, and case studies.

UG 473 Collaboration in Natural Resources Decisions 3 cr. Offered intermittently. Same as FOR 473. Political and social processes affecting natural resource decisions. Examination of cases of multi-party collaboration in forestry, range, and watershed management issues.

U 484 Senior Capstone Project 3 cr. Offered intermittently. Prereq., senior standing in EVST. For seniors who want to design and perform a significant capstone project involving research and/or service. Students have responsibility for designing their projects which are subject to faculty approval. A final report and public presentation are required. Honors credit available.

UG 494 Seminar 3 cr. (R-6) Prereq., EVST 101N or consent of instr. A seminar on a current environmental topic.

UG 495 Special Topics Variable cr. (R-9) Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.

U 496 Independent Study 1-6 cr. (R-6) Offered autumn and spring.

G 501 Scientific Approaches to Environmental Problems 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST or consent of instr. The strength and limitations of the scientific approach to investigating and solving selected environmental problems with an emphasis on the natural sciences.

G 502 Environmental Law for Non-Lawyers 3 cr. Offered spring. Prereq., graduate standing. Review of major substantive environmental laws with an emphasis on areas of citizen involvement in the legal process.

G 504 Colloquium in the Philosophy of Ecology 3 cr. (R-6) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate student in EVST or consent of instr. Same as PHIL 504. Documents of ecology studied in the context of social and political philosophy, metaphysics and ethics, philosophy of science, and technology.

G 505 The Literature of Nature Writing 3 cr. Offered spring. Study of nature, environmental, and place-based writing, from classical times to the present, with emphasis on the American tradition and its relationship to twenty-first century environmental concerns, challenges, and opportunities, and to the current practice of nature writing and natural history.

G 513 Natural Resource Dispute Resolution 3 cr. Offered spring. Same as LAW 613. Provides a conceptual framework for understanding the history of ideas that have shaped the policies, institutions, and strategies used to resolve natural resource and other public policy conflicts in the American West. Focus on natural resource and environmental dispute resolution.

G 520 Environmental Organizing 3 cr. Offered spring. Developing understanding of and skills in community and environmental organizing. Emphasis on theory and practice of civic engagement and social change with a focus on developing and running campaigns and working in a group. Team projects.

G 521 Foundations in Environmental Education 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., graduate standing in environmental studies. Same as C&I 521. Problem-solving approaches to environmental education; problem identification, research and design and implementation of an educational approach to selected environmental issues.

G 525 Teaching Environmental Science 1-3 cr. (R-6) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., consent of instr. Same as C&I 525. Identification and examination of potential solutions to environmental problems and their impact on society. Major emphasis on teaching methods as they apply to environmental science.

G 531 Citizen Participation in Environmental Decision Making 3 cr. Offered spring. Review of the modes and methods of citizen participation in governmental and corporate decision making. Review of the National and Montana Environmental Policy Act; administrative rule making and appeals, strategic planning, lobbying and corporate governance. Students complete a project with an outside group.

G 537 Building Effective Environmental Organizations 3 cr. Offered spring. Prereq., graduate standing. Focus on the tasks and skills necessary to building and managing effective environmental organizations, particularly non-profit. Budgeting, fund-raising, grant-writing, attracting and utilizing volunteers, working with the media. Strategic approaches and how they are shaped by issue, context, and structure.

G 540 Watershed Conservation Ecology 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., college ecology course or consent of instr. Overview of the basic science, management, policy and social action aspects of watershed conservation, preservation and restoration.

G 542 Transboundary Environmental Issues 3 cr. Offered intermittently in autumn. Prereq., graduate standing in environmental studies program. Review of the political systems and administrative systems of each country relevant to natural resource policy decision-making and ecological systems. Review pertinent literature, interact with stakeholders, and produce group reports.

G 548 Supervision and Teaching in Environmental Education 3 cr. Offered intermittently. Prereq., EVST 521 or C&I 521. Design, selection and evaluation of materials for the teaching of environmental education.

G 550 Pollution Ecology 3 cr. Offered spring even-numbered years. Prereq., college ecology course or consent of instr. Same as BIOL 550. Environmental fate and biological effects of pollutants, especially in aquatic ecosystems. Pollution reduction and prevention strategies; related law and policies.

G 551 Environmental Field Study 1-3 cr. (R-3) Offered autumn. Prereq. or coreq., EVST 540 or 550 or 560. Same as BIOL 551. Designing, executing and interpreting environmental studies. Project oriented.

G 555 Research Methods for Social Change 3 cr. Offered autumn. Same as SOC 555. Introduction to qualitative methods of research design, data collection, and analysis. Emphasis on research that facilitates and documents social change processes. Hands-on research experience through fieldwork projects. Includes instruction on writing social science and on research ethics.

G 560 Environmental Impact Analysis 3 cr. Offered spring odd-numbered years. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST or consent of instr. Basis for analyzing environmental impacts of various activities; preparing and critiquing federal and state environmental impact documents, such as environmental reviews, impact statements, etc.

G 561 Land Use Planning Law 3 cr. Offered autumn. Same as GEOG 561 and LAW 687. Basic overview of the law of land use planning including background in the traditional governmental regulatory, proprietary, and fiscal land use tools. Examination of modern techniques for land use planning; consideration of constitutional limits of authority of state and local governments. Focus on skills in interpreting, drafting and applying state legislation and local ordinances.

G 562 Land Use Planning Clinic 2 cr. Offered every term. Prereq. or coreq., EVST 561. Same as GEOG 562. Students assist local communities in long-range planning efforts and development of growth management plans as required by Montana law; ordinance drafting, development proposals, and land use issues.

G 563 Environmental Law I 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST. Same as LAW 650. Philosophy and values underlying environmental regulation, basic introduction to administrative law, in-depth study of air and water pollution and the environmental policy acts.

G 564 Environmental Law II 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST. Same as LAW 649. In-depth study of the laws addressing toxic substances and solid and hazardous waste, and the Endangered Species Act. Exploration of interaction between land use regulation and environmental law.

G 565 Public Land and Resources Law 3 cr. Offered spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST and consent of instr. Same as LAW 654. Historical development of United States public land law, state-federal relations, and the roles of Congress, the executive and the courts; the law applying to specific public land resources: water, minerals, timber, range, and preservation.

G 566 Advanced Problems in Public Land and Resources Law 2 cr. Offered spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST and consent of instr. Same as LAW 619. Collaborative work on practical problems arising in public land and resources law and individual research and writing projects.

G 567 Water Law 2 cr. Offered spring. Same as LAW 663. Interstate water problems; federal/state powers; federal/Indian water rights; Montana water law.

G 573 Environmental Writing 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., graduate standing. Writing workshop designed to improve skills in writing on environmental topics for general audiences. Approaches include personal narrative, natural history, science interpretation, advocacy/argument, place-based essays. Includes analysis of published work from the perspective of technique and craft.

G 575 Seminar in Rhetoric and Environmental Controversy 3 cr. Offered intermittently. Same as COMM 575. The study of how advocates use symbols to influence meaning and action in environmental controversies. Rhetorical concepts used to examine recurring strategies and tactics in specific controversies.

G 590 Supervised Internship PEAS Variable cr. (R-8) Offered every term. Prereq., consent of instr. Program in Ecological Agriculture and Society (PEAS).

G 593 Professional Paper Variable cr. (R-6) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST.

G 594 Graduate Seminar 3 cr. (R-15) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST or consent of instr. In-depth analysis of a current environmental topic. Different topics offered each semester.

G 595 Special Topics Variable cr. (R-9) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST or consent of instr. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.

G 596 Independent Study Variable cr. (R-12) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST. Work on selected problems by individual students under direct faculty supervision.

G 597 Research Variable cr. (R-12) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST. Directed individual graduate research and study appropriate to background and objectives of the student.

G 598 Cooperative Education Experience Variable cr. (R-8) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST. Practical application of classroom learning during placements off campus.

G 599 Thesis Variable cr. (R-6) Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., graduate standing in EVST.

Faculty

Professors

Leonard Broberg, Ph.D., University of Oregon, 1995 (Director)

Thomas M. Roy, M.A., University of Chicago, 1966

Vicki Watson, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1981

Associate Professors

Fletcher Brown, Ph.D., Miami University, 1994

Neva Hassanein, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin, 1997

Assistant Professors

Phil Condon, M.F.A., M.S., The University of Montana, 1989, 2000

Robin Saha, Ph.D., University of Michigan, 2002