POS 2032: Politics of Sustainability

The University of Florida, Fall 2014

Section : 059A
MWF 4th period 10:40-11:30
Room: FAC 0127 / Instructor: Seaton Tarrant
office: 320 Anderson Hall
email: / Office hours:
Mon. 9:30-10:30
Fri. 11:00 – 12:00
Or by appointment

Course Description

Sustainability is defined as ______Politics can be understood as ______. To understand how societies strive to achieve the various objectives of sustainability, we must learn how to think analytically about politics, to critically asses our own beliefs and practices as well the beliefs and practices of others, and to engage methodically, proactively, and collaboratively in creating the change and improvement we seek in the world. In this course, we focus on the varying interests, ideas, and values that shape how societies define sustainability; the governance strategies through which societies pursue sustainability; and the debates, conflicts, and trade-offs that accompany these efforts.

This is a core course for students majoring in Sustainability Studies, but it is open to all students. This course satisfies the General Education requirement for social sciences.

Required Reading

There are two required books:

·  Thomas Prugh, Robert Costanza, and Herman Daly, The Local Politics of Global Sustainability (Washington, D.C.: Island Press, 2000)

·  Wangari Maathi, Unbowed: A Memoir (Vintage, 2006)

· 

All other readings will be supplied electronically. The Syllabus contains the list of required readings and assignments for each day. IT MAY BE REVISED during the semester, and an updated version will always be available on the course E-learning site: https://elearning2.courses.ufl.edu/portal/login

There is a UF Facebook group for this course, which comes in very handy, so join now. It is here that I will disseminate extra credit opportunities and related community events.
It is YOUR RESPONSIBILITY to print the online readings or download them onto your own computer or e-reader in a timely manner, and to complete all readings prior to class time.

Course Assessments

First Exam 15% - Multiple short answer essay question, in class.

Second Exam 15% - Single answer essay question, in class (this takes the place of the final exam)

Pop Quiz 5% - I tend to give pop quizzes when class attendance appears lowest. There will be up to 5 of these, each worth 1%. The pop quiz might be on that week’s readings, or might be a chance to offer your personal opinion on a given issue (in which case it is graded for completion only), or something more fun. If attendance remains consistent, and I feel no need to give these quizzes, I will simply give everyone the full 5% at the end of the term.

Group Project 20% (10 individual, 10 collectively). I will discuss this in class.

Discussion Journal 10% You will keep a record of your interactions with your classmates. You will write in this journal every Wednesday at the beginning of class, and you are encouraged to make other entries as well. The Discussion Journal is to be kept in a notebook, separate and distinct from your class notes.

Blog 15% (5 for prompt; 5 for blogging; 5 for comments) *these get graded every three weeks; though prompts go out every week. I will explain this in class.

Literature Review 15% Each student will complete a 5 page literature review on a topic of their choosing, to be decided in consultation with the instructor. I will provide a grading rubric for this assignment, and I will also review the online research tools that are available through the UF library system.

Pre and Post Tests 5% These are graded for completion only, each worth 2.5 %, and are taken online on the e-learning site. They shouldn’t take more than about 15 minutes.

Grading Scale

A 95-100, A- 90-94, B+ 87-89, B 83-86, B- 80-82, C+ 77-79, C 73-76, C- 70-72, D+ 68-70, D 63-67, D- 60-92, E 59 and below.

Please note: a C- is not a qualifying grade for major, minor, Gen Ed, Gordon Rule, or College Basic distribution credit. For more information, go to: http://www.registrar.ufl.edu/catalog/policies/regulationgrades.html

Rules of the Road

If you are absent for any reason, it is your responsibility to find out from your classmates what you missed during that class period. You will have ample opportunities to develop a working relationship with your classmates so this should be easily accomplished. Questions directed at the instructor, either by email, or after class, or in office hours, should focus on the substantive content of the course, though I am also happy to discuss other aspects of and opportunities for sustainable living. I’m happy to clarify what’s on the syllabus, but be sure to consult the syllabus before asking such questions.

Occasionally, I will offer extra credit for attendance or participation in events outside the classroom. These opportunities arise sporadically, and so I cannot promise such opportunities will occur at any given time in the course, or with any certain frequency.

Students are permitted to use laptops in this class, so long as they remain active in the class discussion. If a student appears to be absorbed in non-related content, even if you-know-who just broke up publicly with what’s-his-name and its all over face book, I reserve the right to privately revoke that student’s laptop privileges for the duration of the course, and require that student take notes by hand and print all readings. That said, I am the one providing all these online readings, and I read and write on my laptop pretty much everyday; but as a grad student I have always preferred taking class notes by hand. I found it allows for a more creative, less linear record of my thoughts. I recommend you give it a shot even if you’re a first-rate keyboard jockey. The discussion journal must be kept by hand, in its own notebook. Students are expected to arrive to class on time, be attentive and remain until class is over.

Students who are consistently late will miss the provided opportunities for working in their discussion journal. These interactions cannot be made up. It is by the record contained in your finished discussion journal and in your group work portfolio that I assess your attendance in the course.

Honor Code: Academic honesty and integrity are fundamental values of the University community.An academic honesty offense is defined as the act of lying, cheating, or stealing academic information so that one gains academic advantage. In the event that a student is found cheating or plagiarizing, s/he will receive a zero for the assignment and will be reported to Student Judicial Affairs. For more information, go to: http://www.dso.ufl.edu/studentguide/studentrights.php

Students with disabilities requesting classroom accommodation must first register with the Dean of Students Office. The Dean of Students Office will provide documentation to the student who must then provide this documentation to the Instructor when requesting accommodation. Anyone with a disability should feel free to see the professor during office hours to make the necessary arrangements.


Course Reading Schedule

This class schedule includes (in most weeks) a short introductory lecture to the week’s readings on Mondays, followed by discussion of readings; peer-to-peer discussion and general class discussion on Wednesdays, and group work on the semester long project on Fridays. Your physical presence is necessary, but not sufficient. This course stresses engagement and interaction.

August

Week 1 - Introduction to the Social Sphere of Sustainability: Following the Life of Wangari Maathai

25th

Orientation (including using the online resources)

~David Orr’s What is Education For?

27th

~Begin Friday readings. We’ll be defining Key Terms through Group Mapping and the social sphere of sustainability

29th

~ Wangari Maathai’s Foresters without Diplomas, Seeds of Change, Fighting for Freedom and Freedom Turns a Corner (Maathai 2006, ch. 6, 8, 9, 10)

September

Week 2 – Intro Continued

1st (no class, Labor Day)

3rd

~ Aluta Continua and Opening the Gates of Politics and Rise Up and Walk (Maathai 2006, ch. 11, 12, and 13) I will read from the Monkey Wrench Gang to provide contrast readings; intro, camping seen (39), bridge seen, river seen, strangers in the night

5th

~ Prugh et al. Introduction, required text, I will also post this first reading, in case your book hasn’t arrived

Guest Speaker: Tom Kay, Director of Alachua Conservation Trust

Week 3 - A Short History of Environmental Policy

8th

~ The Three Epochs of the Environmental Movement (Mazmanian and Kraft 2009, ch. 1) and Regulating for the Future (Fiorino in Mazmanian and Kraft 2009, ch. 3) and

10th

~ The Sustainability Principle (Beder 2006, ch. 1).

12th (First Blog Graded)

Meeting Your Team and Identifying the Issue

Week 4 - Markets

15th

~ Neither Sustainable nor Development (Luke 2005) and The Politics of Big Brand Sustainability (Dauvergne and Lister 2013) and Limits of Environmentalism without Class (J B Foster)

17th

~ The Sustainability Principle and Economic Instruments (Beder 2006, ch. 10) and Prugh chapter 4 Prelude to Politics

19th

Stakeholder Perspectives exercise

Week 5 – Civic Environmentalism

22nd

~ Personal Accountability (Coleman 2012, ch. 3)

24th

~ Environmental Citizenship (Andrew Dobson) and Green Civic Republicanism (John Barry)

26th

Writing the Elevator Speech and Composing the Vision Statement

Week 6 - Social Justice and Empowerment

29th

~ Agyeman’s Just Sustainabilities and Coleman ch. 4 & 5

October

1st

~ Beder ch. 4-6

3rd (Second Blog Graded)

Framing the Problem part 1 - Asset Mapping (READ Kretzman and McKnight for this exercise)

Week 7 – Governance

6th

~ Effective Crisis in Governance (Bryan Martin in Brown 2013, ch. 25)

8th

~ Governance (Orr 2009, ch 1) and Bevir Introduction

10th (Midterm)

Week 8 – Political Implications of Other Key Principles

13th

~ Beder Chapter 2 The Polluter Pays Principle

15th

~ Beder Chapter 3 The Precautionary Principle

(17th homecoming)

(Third Blog Graded)

Week 9 - The Politics of Food – Selections from The Revolution Will Not Be Microwaved

20th

~ Katz ch. 2 Seed Saving as a Political Act, and ch. 3 Holding Our Ground: Land and Labor Struggles

22nd

~ Katz ch. 6 Food and Healing (Here’s where I”m going to Portland)

24th

Framing the Problem part 2 (individual research)

Week 10 – The Politics of Water

27th -

~ Katz Ch 10 Water: Source of All Life and 10 Collaborative Watershed Partnerships in the Epoch of Sustainability 255

29th

~ Selections from Bottled and Sold

31st

Framing the Problem part 3 achieving relative consensus and revisiting the vision statement

November

Week 11 - The Politics of Permaculture

3rd

~ John Barry 2012, Chapter 3

5th

~ Selections from online Permaculture websites

7th (Fourth Blog Graded)

Devising Sustainable Solutions

Week 12 - Democracy

10th

~ Prugh et al. ch. 5

12th

~ Prugh et al. ch. 6

14th

Finishing up Report

Week 13 – The Politics of Community

~ Lewis, It Comes From the People part 1

19th

Gaventa, selections from Power and Powerlessness and Hempel ch. 2 )(in Mazmanian and Kraft)

21st (*Second Exam)

Film on the 24th, to be decided in class

(Thanksgiving Break)

December

Week 14 – Review and Reflection

1st

Katz Epilogue and Small Wins

3rd

Orr Hope at the End of our Tether

5th (Turn in Literature Review and Discussion Portfolio)

Self assessment of role in group projects

Final 2 classes

8th Business/Community Plan due

Peer assessment and presentation of group work

Fifth Blog Graded

10th

Final Thoughts and Snacks

Appendix A – Blog Rubrics

Blog Prompt (1)

Each student will contribute one blog prompt to the class, to which other students can respond. These prompts will be at least 250 words, reference an important current event issue relevant to that week’s readings, and include reference to at least three hyperlinked sources on the web that students can click on to learn more about the topic, and the basis for the prompt. The schedule for blog prompt due dates will go out at the end of the first week of class.

*Important: you will post your prompt to the blog, just like you would a regular post; the only difference is, you will tag it Prompt, so other students can find the prompts, and so I can give you credit for your prompt.

Blog Posts (5 total)

Each student will contribute to the blog at least once each three weeks, by responding to the blog prompts that are emailed to the class. Blog posts are to be at least 150 words. Students are encouraged to contribute to the blog more often, and there is no word minimum (or limit) when they do so.

Blog Comments (10 total)

Each student will comment at least twice each three weeks on the blog post of one of their fellow students. Comments can challenge, agree, add additional insight, and do a hundred other things. Comments should be at least 50 words (I only count these words when one looks exceptionally short).

Appendix B – Discussion Journal Rubric

For the discussion journal, please purchase a spiral notebook, or else build a notebook from reused one sided printer sheets discarded in one of the print labs or libraries. Have this notebook built or purchased by the second class and always bring it to class. Before class each Wednesday, you will fill out, in your notebook, the following:


Date:

Reading:

Insight: (here’s where you document what new thoughts the reading provided for you, in most cases, the more creative or personally relevant, the more it will be truly insightful)

Challenge: (here’s where you respond critically to the text – what doesn’t the reading do? What information/perspective/data is missing? How is power working in this analysis? Cui bono? What assumptions are made but not made explicit?)

Question: (Here is where you pose a question, either as a follow up to the reading, or in regards to something you didn’t understand clearly from the reading.

At the beginning of class on Wednesday, you will pair up with another student (this should be a student you have not previously paired up with).

In your notebook, below the information outlined above, you will write

Your Discussion Partner’s full name

Your discussion partner’s insight, challenge, and question