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    EEI Course:: Our 2007 Course Register Now

Andrew LightEnvironmental Ethics and Policy

Online: July 1-24 Face-to-face: August 6-10

Professor Andrew Light
Department of Philosophy & Evans School of Public Affairs
University of Washington (website)

This class will serve as a foundation for discussion of the overwhelming challenge of environmental degradation and the human responses to that degradation. The course will focus on contemporary environmental, moral and political theories, as well as the general use of philosophical methods in broader environmental questions and policies.

Registration deadline: June 25

Contact us as soon as possible to apply for Center for Ethics financial assistance if you have financial need.

Syllabus for Environmental Ethics and Policy... Register

More information:

Dr. Light is a prolific writer, the author of over seventy articles and book chapters and is editor or co-editor of sixteen books in the fields of environmental ethics and policy, philosophy of technology, moral and political philosophy, and aesthetics. He is also a coveted lecturer and speaker, with engagements across Europe and the Americas. His course with us last summer was extremely well received, and one student even composed a song in his honor (called "Andrewsphere").

The course combines a half online, half face-to-face format, which one student last year called "The perfect balance of a variety of teaching strategies!" For all of July you simply follow the readings and join in discussion online when you can (within some parameters to make sure everyone is keeping up). This way everyone develops a broad understanding of the material and issues before coming together in Missoula for the intensive, though not overwhelming, face-to-face portion (August 6-10).

Two additional features that were praised by last year's students were the high caliber of fellow students and the evening events. This year Andrew Light's course has already attracted three young professors from around the country - all with fascinating backgrounds in ecology and environmental ethics themselves - along with graduate students and some professionals who are simply interested in Dr. Light and this topic. The evening events, which are free and open to the public, were also greatly enjoyed by last year's students as a compliment to the courses, with discussions regularly continuing over pints at nearby pubs.

The course can be taken for graduate or undergraduate credit in either Philosophy or Environmental Studies. Costs are deliberately kept low ($120 per credit-hour) for UM students, and some scholarship funds are available.

Other opportunities:

Later this year and next fall, the Center for Ethics will offer two new on-line environmental ethics courses:


2007 Evening Events (event webpage)

2007 Evening EventsThis year, as in 2006, we will organize a series of stimulating evening lectures featuring the professors from our courses along with local and regional experts in fields relating to Environmental Ethics. These lectures are free and open to the public and last year drew an engaging and thoughtful audience of community members, University of Montana students, and students who traveled from across the country to attend our Environmental Ethics Institute courses.

When Speaker(s) Title Place
TBA

Our first week's events are currently being replanned. Please check back soon for the latest on the following two events:

John Engen (Mayor of Missoula, MT) & guests“Local Responses to Global Climate Change.” 

Ben Minteer (Arizona State University)“Civic Agrarianism: New Roots for Environmental Ethics.”

TBA
Aug. 6 Andrew Light “The Future of Environmental Ethics in the age of Global Warming.”  GBB
Aug. 7 Paul Thompson (Michigan State University) “Placing Place: How Agrarian Philosophy Can Help”- cosponsored by Garden City Harvest The PEAS farm
Aug. 8 Vicki Colvin (Rice University) “Nanotechnology and the Environment.”  GBB
Aug. 9 Panel discussion featuring Clark Wolf (Iowa State University), Don Brown (Rock Ethics Institute, Penn State
University) and Rebecca Bendick (UM)
“Ethical Dimensions of Climate Change.” GBB

There will also be some overlap between this summer's EEI topics and those discussed in our new program: Debating Science.

* GBB is the Gallagher Business Building on The University of Montana Campus - rooms to be used are 106 and 123.

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The Center for Ethics | 1000 East Beckwith | The University of Montana | Missoula, MT 59812-2808 | (406) 243-5744 | (406) 243-6633, fax | ethics@mso.umt.edu

|| :: Revised: June, 2007 :: ||

Frontpiece photo by Justin Whitaker, website by Justin Whitaker