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Agriculture and Environmental Science 015
Agronomy
Animal Science 067
Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences 110
Biochemistry 115
Biotechnology 126
Bioresource Engineering 127
Cooperative Education 199
Education 300
Entomology 370
Environmental Planning and Geomatics 372
Environmental and Business Economics 373
Environmental Policy, Institutions, and Behavior 374
Environmental Sciences 375
Food Science 400
Landscape Architecture 550
Interdisciplinary Studies 554
Marine Sciences 628
Meteorology 670
Microbiology 680
Ecology and Natural Resources 704
Nutritional Sciences 709
Plant Pathology 770
Plant Science 776
Soils 930
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Mason Gross School of the Arts
Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy
Rutgers Business School: Undergraduate-New Brunswick
School of Communication, Information and Library Studies (SCILS)
School of Engineering
Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy
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Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
New Brunswick/Piscataway Undergraduate Catalog 2005-2007 Cook College Course Listing Environmental Policy, Institutions, and Behavior 374  

Environmental Policy, Institutions, and Behavior 374
11:374:101Introduction to Human Ecology (3) The study of complex and varied patterns of interaction between people and the environment, with special attention to concepts, concerns, and methods of human ecology.
11:374:102Global Environmental Processes and Institutions (3) Scientific and policy dimensions of international environmental affairs; problems, response mechanisms, regional and national activities, and alternative strategies. Prerequisite: 11:374:101.
11:374:175Energy and Society (3) Main sources, transfers, and losses of energy in the biosphere; how they relate to human resources and enter the immediate environments of humans and other organisms.
11:374:201Research Methods in Human Ecology (3) The basic research techniques used by social scientists, planners, and others in writing social impact statements, evaluating programs, and carrying out basic research on human problems.
11:374:211Rural Communities (3) Investigations of the patterns of social life that prevail in the rural communities of developed and developing countries.
11:374:220Rural Development (3) Analysis of private and public efforts to make fuller use of human and natural resources in impoverished rural areas of the developed and developing worlds.
11:374:223Urban Society and Environment (3) Growth of cities in industrial countries, with emphasis on their physical and social environments and on policies for improvement.
11:374:269Population, Resources, and Environment (3) The interaction between populations, resources, and the environment in the developed and developing worlds.
11:374:279Politics of Environmental Issues (3) The content and process of policy making concerning air and water quality, toxic wastes, energy, and other environmental issues.
11:374:301Environment and Development (3) Conflicts between development objectives and conservation goals. Institutional, scientific, and political factors in international agency activities. Focus on variations in environment-development conflicts according to development sectors. Prerequisites: 01:119:103 or equivalent; 11:374:101, 102, 201; 11:704:351.
11:374:308Human Ecology of Maritime Regions (3) The study of sociocultural factors affecting marine resource use, management, and conservation.
11:374:312Environmental Problems in Historical and Cross-Cultural Perspective (3) Historical aspects of environmental use and change in relation to present-day problems in sustaining the productivity of physical and biological systems. Prerequisites: 01:119:103 or equivalent; 11:374:101, 102, 201; 11:704:351.
11:374:313Environmental Policy and Institutions (3) Political, scientific, and economic dimensions of international resource and environmental policy development. Emphasis on the U.S. experience. Prerequisites: 01:119:103 or equivalent; 11:374:101, 201; 11:704:351.
11:374:314Human Dimensions of Natural Resource Management (3) Application of theory and methods of social science, particularly the study of common property theory, to problems in natural resource management. Focus on water use, forestry, rangelands, and fisheries. Prerequisite: 11:374:101.
11:374:315International Environmental Policy (3) The creation of international institutions to deal with shared and global environmental problems, such as ocean use and population. Assessment of the effectiveness of existing/proposed regimes, using decision-making simulations. Prerequisites: 01:119:103 or equivalent; 11:374:101, 102, 201; 11:704:351.
11:374:322Environmental Behavior (3) Understanding human behavior and attitudes as they relate to environmental protection efforts. Field project conducted by the class to promote environmentally desirable behavior. Prerequisites: 01:119:103 or equivalent; 11:374:101, 102, 201; 11:704:351.
11:374:325Environmental Communication (3) Development of skills in various modes to encourage environmental change: fact sheets, letters to the editor, press releases. Identification of key audiences and development of effective communication plans. Analysis and evaluation of efforts by industry, government, and advocacy groups.
11:374:331Culture and Environment (3) The interrelationship between culture and the environment among a wide variety of human groups.
11:374:335-336Social Responses to Environmental Problems I,II (3,3) Analysis of people's responses to environmental stresses or disturbances and the ways in which response patterns change. Second term: individual or group field research.
11:374:337Systems Approaches and Interventions in Human Ecology (3) Systems thinking and social-scientific perspectives for intervention; problem solving; and planning in agricultural, urban, environmental, and related organizational contexts. Field research, group facilitation, simulation, planning, and mediation. Ethics and professional practice. To be taken concurrently with 11:374:490 or 491. Pre- or corequisite:
11:374:341Social and Ecological Aspects of Health and Disease (3) The sociocultural factors affecting health status and disease frequency in human populations.
11:374:343Advanced Research Methods and Theory (3) Analysis of modes of explanation in social and ecological sciences: causal and noncausal explanations; the relation of processes and events; their usefulness for understanding behavior in different cultures and time periods. Prerequisite: 11:374:201.
11:374:420 through 429Topics in Environmental and Resource Policy (3 each) Policy issues associated with a selected environmental and/or resource problem, focusing on risk and risk communication, science and policy, institutions, comparative national approaches, and policy implications of environmental change. Open only to juniors and seniors.
11:374:430 through 439Topics in Health and Environment (3 each) Policy issues associated with a selected problem in human health and disease, food and hunger, or environmental and occupational health. The social sources of disease and malnutrition, and interventions to improve health. Open only to juniors and seniors.
11:374:451Qualitative Research Methods (3) Fundamentals of qualitative research, including research design, developing useful questions, in-depth interviewing, summarizing information and data analysis, and their applications in various settings. Team research projects applied to current environmental problems.
Prerequisite: 11:374:201 or permission.
11:374:490,491Readings and Practicum in Human Ecology (3,3) Advanced interdisciplinary reading and independent research in human ecology under the guidance of a faculty member.
11:374:492Environmental Studies Internship (BA) Internships involving environmental research and policy at Rutgers, other institutions, public agencies, nongovernmental organizations, or businesses. Prerequisite: Permission.
11:374:493Environmental Communication Clinic (3) Practicum in developing and implementing communication strategies. Team projects for nonprofit or government organizations facing environmental problems that require effective communication. Prerequisite: 01:355:202, 203 or equivalent, or permission.
 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 732/932-info (4636) or colonel.henry@rutgers.edu.
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