- Docente: Timothy Raeymaekers
- Crediti formativi: 6
- SSD: M-GGR/01
- Lingua di insegnamento: Inglese
- Modalità didattica: Convenzionale - Lezioni in presenza
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: Laurea Magistrale in Global Cultures (cod. 6033)
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dal 31/03/2025 al 16/05/2025
Conoscenze e abilità da conseguire
At the end of the course, the students will be able to use and apply geographic concepts and place the climate crisis in a wider geographic and historical frame. They will be able to assess humanity’s critical relation with the Earths’ natural resources, with ecological risk, with food security and with climate resilience using a geographic conceptual and methodological framework. The dynamic teaching method (based on critical reading, class discussions and presentations) will enable them to acquire the theoretical and empirical skills to critically analyse the global strategies of climate resilience in relation to uneven economic development, to work in groups and to critically assess academic readings on the subject.
Contenuti
The course’s main objective is to offer a conceptual and methodological framework for understanding, interpreting, and contextualizing humanity’s problematic relation with the Earth from a geography perspective. The course engages with key human geography concepts and methods through in-depth reading and discussion, as well as through specific thematic case studies.
At the end of the course, students will be able
(1) To read and understand leading academic debates in the domain of geography with respect to climate crisis
(2) To critically use key human geography concepts – of place, space, territory, borders, mobility, and difference – as a framework to understand, interpret and contextualize complex planetary phenomena
(3) To apply such concepts to the specific study fields through in-depth reading, collective discussion and individual (written and oral) elaboration
Testi/Bibliografia
Attending and non-attending students are required to read all ‘key readings’ in preparation for the exam.
Key readings (in alphabetical order)
Dalby, S. (2013) ‘The geopolitics of climate change’, Political Geography, 37, pp. 38–47.
Fairhead, J., Leach, M: and Scoones, I. (2012) Green Grabbing: a new appropriation of nature? Routledge (chapter one)
Featherstone, D. (2013) The Contested Politics of Climate Change and the Crisis of Neo-liberalism, in ACME, 12(1): 44-64
Finch-Race, D., Jordan, J., Martini, A., Raeymaekers, T. (2024) Geographers Are Talking—About Waste, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 23/3: 260-277.
Friedmann, H. (2005), "From Colonialism to Green Capitalism: Social Movements and Emergence of Food Regimes", Buttel, F.H. and McMichael, P. (Ed.) New Directions in the Sociology of Global Development (Research in Rural Sociology and Development, Vol. 11), Emerald Group Publishing Limited, Leeds, pp. 227-264
Goldman, M. J., Turner, M. D., & Daly, M. (2018). A critical political ecology of human dimensions of climate change: Epistemology, ontology, and ethics. Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews: Climate Change, 9(4), e526
IPES Food (2022) Smoke and mirrors: examining competing framings of food system sustainability: agroecology, regenerative agriculture, and nature-based solutions.
Lahoud, A. (2014) ‘Floating Bodies’, in E. Weizman and A. Franke (eds) Forensis: The Architecture of Public Truth. Berlin: Sternberg Press.
Malm, A. and Hornborg, A. (2014) ‘The geology of mankind? A critique of the Anthropocene narrative’, The Anthropocene Review, 1(1), pp. 62–69.
McMichael, Philip. 2005. “Global Development and the Corporate Food Regime.” Research in Rural Sociology and Development 11:265–99
Moore, J. (2003) Capitalism as a World Ecology: Braudel and Marx on Environmental History, Organization & Environment 16(4) (December): 431-458
Murphy, M. (2017) Alterlife and Decolonial Chemical Relations, Cultural Anthropology 32(4): 494-503
Newell, P. (2022) ‘Climate justice’, The Journal of Peasant Studies, 49(5): 915–923.
Nightingale, A. J. et al (2019). Beyond Technical Fixes: climate solutions and the great derangement. Climate and Development, 12(4): 343–352
Pelling, M. (2011). Adaptation to climate change: From resilience to transformation. London: Routledge: chapter 3
Sacchi, G. Et al. (2022) Consumer renaissance in Alternative Agri-Food Networks between collective action and co-production, in: Sustainable Production and Consumption 29: 311-327
Sheller, M (2018) ‘Theorising Mobility Justice’. Tempo Social 30 (2): 17–34.
Sommerville, M., Essex, J. & Le Billon, P. (2014) The ‘Global Food Crisis’ and the Geopolitics of Food Security, Geopolitics, 19(2): 239-265.
Sultana, F. (2021) ‘Critical climate justice’, The Geographical Journal, 188(1): 118-124
Sultana, F. (2022) ‘The unbearable heaviness of climate coloniality’, Political Geography, p. 102638.
Swyngedouw, E. (2013) ‘The Non-political Politics of Climate Change’, ACME: An International Journal for Critical Geographies, 12(1): 1–8.
Walker, S. (2023) Dakar has lost its lungs: What the spatialised inequalities of waste can tell us about climate (im)mobilities, EPC: Politics and Space (online first)
Non-attending students are required to read one additional text, to be selected from the following list:
Armiero, M. (2021) Wasteocene: stories from the global dump. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
Barca, Stefania. 2020. Forces of Reproduction: Notes for a Counter-hegemonic Anthropocene. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Ghosh, A. (2016). The great derangement: Climate change and the unthinkable. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Latour, B. (2018) Down to Earth: Politics in the New Climatic Regime. Newark (UK) Polity Press.
Moore, Jason W. 2015. Capitalism in the Web of Life. London: Verso.
Tsing, A. L., Swanson, H. A., Gan, E., & Bubandt, N. (Eds.). (2017). Arts of living on a damaged planet: Ghosts and monsters of the Anthropocene. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
Metodi didattici
For attending students, this course adopts a ‘flipped class’ format, which means that students prepare the ‘key readings’ for each session (the calendar will be communicated during the first session). Attending students are required to attend at least 75% of the course sessions.
For non-attending students, the method of study involves the key readings plus one additional text from the reference list above
Modalità di verifica e valutazione dell'apprendimento
For attending students, the overall mark consists of the following elements: short essay (70%) and oral exam (30%)
The exam involves an individual oral test in the teachers’ office on the course’s key readings. Students will be asked to answer three open questions, which broadly cover the readings and the discussions held in class. Registrations for examination dates are made on AlmaEsami. The evaluation is aimed at verifying the level of understanding of the key readings.
The essay should answer one of the following questions, using a minimum of three key readings form the course material:
- How is the climate crisis political?
- How does place matter in addressing the climate crisis?
- How can scholarship overcome the ontological boundaries of climate change as a sphere of political intervention?
- What should climate justice look like in practice?
Structurally, each essay (min. 1000-max. 1500 words excluding bibliography) is composed of the following parts: (1) an abstract detailing the research question and thesis statement (hypothetical answer), (2) a body of text in which you address the question point by point in a conceptual way (i.e. addressing the main concepts and briefly evoking one or more examples); (3) a conclusion that links the argument back to the initial question; (4) a bibliography containing a minimum of 3 references to the texts used and selected from the course literature.
THE ESSAYS MUST BE SENT TO THE TEACHER'S ELECTRONIC ADDRESS NO LATER THAN 5 WORKING DAYS BEFORE THE CALL FOR THE ORAL EXAM IN MICROSOFT WORD OR ANOTHER WRITING PROGRAM (NOT PDF) IN THE FOLLOWING MODE: Surname_essay GLOC
ESSAYS WHICH DO NOT MEET THESE CRITERIA WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED
Non-attending students book an oral exam during which they will be asked to discuss three open questions based on the key texts as well as the additional reading they have selected for this course.
Strumenti a supporto della didattica
All Power Point presentations and other materials for attending students will be available via the "teaching materials" ("materiali didattici") on the virtual area of this course. Access is restricted to University of Bologna students. The slides are not to be considered as exam matter but serve as a didactic support for the course.
The course outline and assessment methods will be fully described during the first lecture and published in detail on the power point "Presentation of the course".
Students who require specific services and adaptations to teaching activities due to a disability or specific learning disorders (SLD), must first contact the appropriate office
Orario di ricevimento
Consulta il sito web di Timothy Raeymaekers
SDGs
L'insegnamento contribuisce al perseguimento degli Obiettivi di Sviluppo Sostenibile dell'Agenda 2030 dell'ONU.