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Description
This course will spend approximatley twelve days on location at the Clayoquot Sound Biosphere Reserve on Vancouver Island. This is a site of astounding natural beauty as well as economic and political significance. In 1993 the area staged Canada's largest act of civil disobediance - a protest over logging in one of North America's only remaining old-growth rainforests. Following this episode the region has become something of a microcosm for the competing economic, environmental and political interests that our society must balance on a global scale. Many
of the challenges
confronting this region are familiar to philosophy students. However,
these issues are usually discussed only in an abstract classroom
setting. The aim of this course is to enrich these academic discussions
with first hand experience. We will learn about the ecology and social
history of this region to understand why and how various stakeholders
value it. We will interact with
environmentalists, First Nations groups and industry members to
determine how they view environmental issues. For example, what
does "sustainability" mean to these groups? What are their
respective long term goals and can they be reconciled? Students
will formulate a general research question prior
to arriving in Clayoquot Sound. The experiences that they collect
during the visit will be included in a research paper and a
presentation
that will be prepared over the course of the Fall 2012 semsester. |
PHIL*4160 philosophy field course Tofino, British Columbia 2012 Aug. 23 - Sept. 04 |
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