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Overview
The Environmental Thought and Practice (ETP) major teaches undergraduates to
think about environmental issues within a broadly interdisciplinary framework. Environmental
problems concern natural phenomena whose dimensions are appropriately described by environmental
scientists. However, the "problems" themselves result from changes in public perception that are
contingent upon cultural constructs and historical events. Attempts to solve these problems
necessarily fall within the political sphere, but policy debates draw on principles and discourses
from philosophy, economics, and ethics. In short, understanding and solving environmental problems
demands the ability to connect ideas from such diverse disciplines as anthropology, literature,
history, ethics, politics, the natural sciences, economics, and land use planning.
The objective of the Environmental Thought and Practice
program is to produce students who can:
- comprehend and think critically about scientific information, economic
analysis, and the various ethical constructs that enter into environmental
decisions; and,
- appreciate how political and social context, historical events, and
cultural expectations shape the way we perceive and solve environmental
problems.
From its inception the ETP major was designed around the core principle that undergraduates
need and want to connect classroom theory with real-world practice, a concept that other leading
universities are only now beginning to incorporate into their curricula.
Faculty members from Anthropology, Chemistry, English,
Environmental Sciences, History, Law, the McIntire School of Commerce,
Politics, Religious Studies, Science and Technology Studies, and Urban
and Environmental Planning are involved with the Environmental Thought
and Practice program. Currently the Environmental Thought and Practice
Program has thirty majors.
Click
here to check out the Cavalier Daily's recent article on the
Environmental Thought and Practice Program.
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