The health and wellbeing of humans depends upon the capacity of the biosphere to provide the ecosystem services that sustain them. It is now clear that humans are currently using these services at rates which cannot be sustained. The challenge is for societies to change so as to put themselves on pathways towards sustainable futures. However, initiatives designed to do this must take into account the social and cultural dimensions of such change. The challenge is to couple knowledge about biospheric processes and limits with consideration of human values, judgments and motivation, health, wellbeing and dignity, and ethical dimensions of justice and fairness. To do this coherently, Human Ecology develops integrative transdisciplinary frameworks that can combine insights from a range of disciplines concerned with the human condition with knowledge of ecosystem and Earth processes. The resulting understanding helps formulate pathways towards more humane and sustainable futures.
Learning Outcomes
- Understand the complex, multi-scaled interactions that characterise human-ecological situations and their associated problems.
- Apply advanced systems thinking to understand human-ecological problems in terms of more basic, simple and easily grasped concepts and processes.
- Apply critical methodological approaches to evaluate current human-ecological interactions and to critically evaluate proposed alternatives.
- Apply a range of written, oral and visual communication skills to effectively convey and discuss information about human-ecological change processes, and
- Demonstrate the ability to engage with community, government or private institutions and companies dealing with managing and improving human-ecological interactions across a range of scales.
Other Information
What courses should you take in first year?
This minor does not require any specific 1000-level courses however some later year (2000-3000 level) courses might have prerequisites. Please check individual course entries for details.
Academic or enrolment advice:
Students can seek further advice from the academic contact for this minor (details above), or the College of Science Student Services Team (students.cos@anu.edu.au).
Relevant Degrees
Requirements
This minor requires the completion of 24 units, which must consist of:
Minimum of 6 units from the completion of one the following courses:
ENVS2011 Human Ecology (6 units)
ENVS2013 Society and Environmental Change (6 units)
A minimum of 12 and maximum of 18 units from completion of courses from the following list:
ENVS2005 Island Sustainable Development: Fiji Field School (6 units)
ENVS2007 Economics for the Environment (6 units)
ENVS2012 Sustainable Urban Systems (6 units)
ENVS2017 Vietnam Field School (6 units)
ENVS2023 Sustainable Agricultural Systems (6 units)
ENVS2025 Indigenous Cultural and Natural Resource Management (6 units)
ENVS3007 Participatory Resource Management: Working with Communities and Stakeholders (6 units)
ENVS3028 Environmental Policy (6 units)
ENVS3033 International Environmental Policy (6 units)
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