SDEV W3360y Disasters and Development 3 pts.Not offered in 2013-2014. Prerequisites: EESC 2330; SDEV W2300 Human welfare status is very unevenly
distributed throughout the globe - some of us live very comfortable lives,
others remain in desperate poverty showing little progress away from their
condition. Between are countries that are rapidly developing and converging
toward the welfare of the richest. At all levels of economic development
human activities place significant pressure on the environment and threatens
all of Earth's vital functions and support systems for human life. This
challenge requires timely responses based on solid understanding of the
human/environment interface, technological and economic approaches to
mitigate adverse effects on the environment, and routes to understanding the
complex dynamics of the coupled human/natural systems that can chart a
pathway to improvement in the lives of the poorest and continued well-being
for those who have achieved prosperity without forcing natural systems into
decline or massive fluctuation. This course offers undergraduate students,
for the first time, a comprehensive course on the link between natural
disaster events and human development at all levels of welfare. It explores
the role that natural disasters might have and have had in modulating
development prospects. Any student seriously interested in sustainable
development, especially in light of climate change, must study the nature of
extreme events - their causes, global distribution and likelihood of future
change. This course will cover not only the nature of extreme events,
including earthquakes, hurricanes, floods and droughts but also their
transformation into disaster through social processes. it will ultimately
help students to understand the link between such extreme events, the
economic/social shock they represent and development outcomes. The course
will combine careful analysis of the natural and social systems dynamics that
give rise to disasters and examine through group learning case studies from
the many disasters that have occurred in the first decade of the 21st
century. Offered in the Spring (odd years only).