Students will deal with the population trends in the circumpolar region, natural resource use and the economies of these communities, and economic ownership. This course will also provide students with an appreciation of the main challenges confronting the peoples and communities of the world’s northern regions. As such it will be beneficial to students attempting to better understand the current questions facing the north as well as to those planning to pursue advanced studies about the region.
Upon successful completion of Contemporary Issues I, students will have:
- Acquired a basic appreciation of the most important contemporary issues relating to globalization, sustainable communities, and natural resource use in the circumpolar regions of the world.
- Attained an awareness of the relationship between the unique and diverse aspects of Northern societies and the common concerns facing the region.
- Gained further insight into the complexity and inter-relatedness of human activity and the northern environment.
- Critically examined various proposed explanations of the key challenges facing the North.
- Recognized the cultural and gender-related diversity of approaches and ways of approaching the Circumpolar world.
Related documents
Title | Author | Description |
BCS331 Table of Contents | ||
BCS331 Module 1 | Elana Kotyrlo | Basic Economic Concepts as Applied to the Circumpolar North |
BCS331 Module 2 | Chris Southcott | Changing Northern Economies and Globalization |
BCS331 Module 3 | Romanova and Fillipov | Traditional Northern Economies |
BCS331 Module 4 | Hayley Hesseln | Renewable Resource Economics 1 |
BCS331 Module 5 | Hayley Hesseln | Renewable Resource Economics 2 |
BCS331 Module 6 | Joan Nymand Larsen | Non-Renewable Petroleum |
BCS331 Module 7 | Joan Nymand Larsen | Non-Renewable Mining |
BCS331 Module 8 | Galina Rats | Northern Economic Infrastructure |
BCS331 Module 9 | Elena Kotyrlo | Northern Social Infrastructure |
BCS331 Module 10 | Chris Southcott | Climate Change and Economies |