Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/Brown University/Environmental Injustice and Justice in African History (Spring 2024): Difference between revisions
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Most understandings of environmental justice concern modern industrial pollution and its regulation, but environment and power—both oppressive and liberatory—have been tightly intertwined throughout world history, including in Africa. This course concerns the African past from ancient to contemporary times through the lenses of environmental history, social history, and political ecology. We use them to identify environmental ramifications of hierarchies and efforts to mitigate them through more-than-human connections. As course material approaches the present, we develop a critique of structural inequality and consider movements to achieve justice in environmental realms. No previous knowledge of African studies is expected. |
Most understandings of environmental justice concern modern industrial pollution and its regulation, but environment and power—both oppressive and liberatory—have been tightly intertwined throughout world history, including in Africa. This course concerns the African past from ancient to contemporary times through the lenses of environmental history, social history, and political ecology. We use them to identify environmental ramifications of hierarchies and efforts to mitigate them through more-than-human connections. As course material approaches the present, we develop a critique of structural inequality and consider movements to achieve justice in environmental realms. No previous knowledge of African studies is expected. |
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{{student table row|Oniwe|[[1890s African rinderpest epizootic]]| |
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{{student table row|Hyaak|[[Climate change and sexual and reproductive health and rights in Africa]]|[[2024 South African general election]]}} |
{{student table row|Hyaak|[[Climate change and sexual and reproductive health and rights in Africa]]|[[2024 South African general election]]}} |
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{{student table row|Ohster12|[[Climate change and food security in Africa]]|}} |
{{student table row|Ohster12|[[Climate change and food security in Africa]]|}} |
Latest revision as of 00:49, 2 May 2024
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This course page is an automatically-updated version of the main course page at dashboard.wikiedu.org. Please do not edit this page directly; any changes will be overwritten the next time the main course page gets updated. |
- Course name
- Environmental Injustice and Justice in African History
- Institution
- Brown University
- Instructor
- Nancy Jacobs
- Wikipedia Expert
- Brianda (Wiki Ed)
- Subject
- History
- Course dates
- 2024-01-24 00:00:00 UTC – 2024-05-24 23:59:59 UTC
- Approximate number of student editors
- 15
Most understandings of environmental justice concern modern industrial pollution and its regulation, but environment and power—both oppressive and liberatory—have been tightly intertwined throughout world history, including in Africa. This course concerns the African past from ancient to contemporary times through the lenses of environmental history, social history, and political ecology. We use them to identify environmental ramifications of hierarchies and efforts to mitigate them through more-than-human connections. As course material approaches the present, we develop a critique of structural inequality and consider movements to achieve justice in environmental realms. No previous knowledge of African studies is expected.