UMass Boston

Integrated Sciences Complex at night view from the water.
Environmental Communication

Course Overview

Date / Time Location Credits Minimium Tuition*
1/27/25 - 5/14/25
MoWe 1p.m. – 2:15p.m.
Wheatley W02-0200 3 $1984 (guest students)
Date
1/27/25 - 5/14/25
Time
MoWe 1p.m. – 2:15p.m.
Location
Wheatley W02-0200
Credits
3
Min. Tuition*
$1984 (guest students)

Description

In this course, students will learn how the process of communication constructs our values and relationships with the biophysical world and each other. We explore the contested meanings of nature and the environment and the communication practices that challenge dominant Western notions of the environment individually, ideologically and institutionally. We foreground how racial, ethnic, socioeconomic class, and gender groups experience ecological disasters intensified by climate change. In addition to examining the disproportionate impact on low-income, communities of color, and Indigenous peoples, we will examine how these communities are leading resistance to ecological disasters and environmental violence. We will examine the power dynamics of environmental issues via media and film, journalism, public relations, advertising, rhetoric, and public participation and activism to understand how communication can create a more just and sustainable world. Students will interpret and analyze the voices of individuals and groups struggling to define major environmental topics, such as: climate change and pollution, energy, water, food and agriculture, biodiversity and extinction, ocean life, wilderness habitat, war, and consumerism.

Prerequisites

COMM 100 or ENVSCI 101 or ANTH 263 or ENVSCI 120

This course is closed for registration.

Course Details