FALL 2013 SUSTAINABLE TOURISM AND HOSPITALITY DEPARTMENT OF MARKETING, ENTREPRENEURSHIP, HOSPITALITY, AND TOURISM STH 101-02E: INTRODUCTION TO SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT INSTRUCTOR CLASS SCHEDULE CLASSROOM OFFICE OFFICE HOURS E-MAIL Dr. Suzanne Gallaway Tuesdays, Thursdays, 9:30 - 10:45 a.m. Bryan 114 386 Bryan Tuesdays-Thursdays, 9:00-9:30 solamp@uncg.edu COURSE DESCRIPTION: The social, environmental, and economic dimensions of sustainable development; introduces sustainable development concepts and challenges; and prepares students for the application of these concepts in functional business topics. CREDITS/PREREQUISITES: This is a 3-credit course; there are no prerequisites. STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES: Upon successful completion of the course, the student will be able to: 1. Articulate concepts, definitions, purpose, history, and theories of sustainable development. 2. Discuss sustainable development as a local to global issue. 3. Discuss how values, beliefs, norms, behavior, perceptions, and knowledge impact development. 4. Use approaches and insights from geography, anthropology, psychology, sociology, and political science to analyze and address real world problems associated with unsustainable development. 5. Apply system dynamics approaches to study links between human systems and natural systems and how changes in any part of any system has multiple consequences. 6. Recognize the social justice components of sustainable choices and differences that characterize unsustainable and sustainable forms of development. 7. Identify major stakeholders and institutions that drive change toward sustainable development. 8. Recognize opportunities for making the business case for sustainable development. REQUIRED READINGS: You will be reading various sections, chapters, pages from the readings listed below (all of them are on BlackBoard – under Reading Materials in Course Documents) 1. Beyond Economic Growth: An Introduction to Sustainable Development 2. Sustainability: A Comprehensive Foundation 3. Our Common Future (the Brundtland Report) 4. Back to Our Common Future: Sustainable Development in the 21st Century Project 5. Human Development Report 2013: The Rise of the South 6. World Development Indicators 2012 7. The Millennium Development Goals Report 2013 8. Climate Change Information Kit 9. Triple Bottom Line: What Is it and How Does it Work? 10. Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) and Development 1 11. UN Sustainable Development – Agenda 21 12. Cannibals with Forks (folder has all chapters) RECOMMENDED READINGS: Aslam Uqaili, M. and K. Harijan (2012). Energy, Environment, and Sustainable Development. New York, NY: Springer. Carson, R. (2002). Silent Spring. New York, NY: First Mariner Books. Ewards, A.R. (2005). The Sustainability Revolution: Portrait of a Paradigm Shift. BC, Canada: New Society Publishers. McIntyre, J.R., Ivanaj, S., and V. Ivanaj (2012). Multinational Enterprises and the Challenge of Sustainable Development. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar Publishers. Sacquet, A.M. (2005). World Atlas of Sustainable Development: Economic, Social, and Environmental Data. London, England: Anthem Press. Worldwatch Institute (2010). State of the World 2010: Transforming Cultures from Consumerism to Sustainability. New York, NY: W.W. Norton & Company. USEFUL WEBSITES United Nations (www.un.org) United Nations Development Program (www.undp.org) UNICEF (www.unicef.org) USAID (http://www.usaid.gov/partnershipopportunities/ngo) International Monetary Fund (www.imf.org) World Bank (www.worldbank.org)\ World Health Organization (www.who.int/en) Global Impact (http://charity.org) Global Issues (www.globalissues.org) Poverty (www.poverty.com) White House on Poverty (www.whitehouse.gov/issues/poverty)International Organization for Migration (www.iom.int) International Labor Organization (www.ilo.org) European Commission (http://ec.europa.eu) Library of Congress on International Organizations and Economic Development Resources (www.loc.gov/rr/business/BERA/issue7/organizations.html) Action Against Hunger (www.aah-usa.org) CARE (www.careusa.org) Relief International (www.ri.org) Overseas Development Institute (www.odi.org.uk) List of International Aid and Development Organizations (https://www.devex.com/en/organizations) COURSE REQUIREMENTS: Your final grade will be determined by how well you fulfill course requirements. Your grade will be based on: 1. Three Tests (300 points): You will have three tests, each worth 100 points. Material will cover your readings, class lectures and discussions, and class activities and may be based on textbook, additional readings, websites, or videos. Format will be multiplechoice, true/false, and short answer questions. 2. Two Case Studies (100 points): You will work in class on two case studies, each worth 50 points. The cases will be given to students ahead of time so that they can study and prepare. The actual discussion of the case will take place in teams during a class period. 3. Group Project (100 points): You will work in teams divided into three areas of human, economic, and environmental dimensions of development. Details of the project will be provided. 4. Presentation (50 points): You will present the results of your group project to the rest of class in a professional manner, using audiovisual aids, graphs, etc. Directions for each assignment will be posted on Blackboard, and will be thoroughly discussed in class. In addition, rubrics and other evaluative instruments will be posted on Blackboard and discussed in class. Thus, students will know exactly what they are to accomplish in this class as well as how their grade will be determined. 2 You will receive a score of 0 for any work not submitted. To receive credit for the course, you must earn a letter grade of D- or higher on the weighted average of all assigned course work (e.g., exams, assignments, discussion postings, etc.). Your final grade in the course will be a letter grade. Letter grade equivalents for numerical grades are as follows: 485-500 470-484 450-469 435-449 415-434 400-409 EVALUATION/GRADING SCALE 97-100% A+ 385-399 77-79% 94-96% A 370-384 74-76% 90-93% A350-369 70-73% 87-89% B+ 335-349 67-69% 83-86% B 315-334 63-66% 80-82% B300-314 60-62% 299 or less <59% C+ C CD+ D DF COURSE OUTLINE: WEEK 1 DATE August 20 August 22 2 August 27, 29 TOPICS (*) Introduction of course and topics (sustainable development, triplebottom line) Story of Stuff (23 min.) http://www.youtube.com/v/9Gorq roigqM?version=3&hl=en_US Human, economic, and environmental development Overview of the developed and developing worlds Joel Cohen (Floating University, 43 min.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =PZrmYp4USWo Economic indicators (GDP, GNI, external debt, poverty, labor/unemployment) Richard Wilkinson, 17 min.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =cZ7LzE3u7Bw Environmental indicators (CO2 emissions, forest area, biodiversity, deforestation, pollution) Johan Rockstrom (TED Talk, 18 min.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =RgqtrlixYR4 Kitty van der Heijden (TED Talk, 19 min.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =4sJ-uixn7Jg REQUIRED READINGS READ: The Triple Bottom Line-What Is It? (BlackBoard) READ: Chapters 1-4, 15 Beyond Economic Growth (BlackBoard) 1. “What is Development?” (pp. 7-11) 2. “Comparing Levels of Development” (pp. 12-16) 3. “World Population Growth” (pp. 17-22) 4. “Economic Growth Rates” (pp. 23-27) 5. “Composite Indicators of Development” (pp. 110-112) BROWSE: World Development Indicators 2012 (BlackBoard) http://www.un.org/millenniumgoals/ http://data.worldbank.org/indicator http://www.globalissues.org/issue http://www.worldbank.org/ WATCH: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ozDskXxmdDI Social indicators (education, life expectancy, child mortality, birth 3 3 4 September 3, 5 September 10, 12 rate/population, health/disease, gender equity) Hans Rosling (TED Talk, 10 min.) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v =fTznEIZRkLg Effects of globalization Stakeholders: UN, World Bank, IMF, NGOs, private/public sectors, citizens, countries (developed, developing) READ: Chapters 12-13, Beyond Economic Growth (BlackBoard) 1. “Globalization: International Trade and Migration” (pp. 83-94) 2. “Globalization: Foreign Investment and Foreign Aid” (pp. 95-101) BROWSE: http://geography.about.com/od/globalproblemsa ndissues/a/globalization.htm READ: NGOs and Development (BlackBoard) 1. “Introduction” (pp. 1-23) 2. “Understanding Development NGOs in Historical Context” (pp. 24-46) 3. “NGOs and Development” (pp. 71-90) BROWSE: http://www.unrol.org/article.aspx?article_id=23 http://ec.europa.eu/social/main.jsp?catId=330 http://www.who.int/apoc/about/structure/ngdo/e n/ http://www.iisd.org/business/ngo/roles.aspx 5 September 17 Test 1 September 19 In-class case activity 6 September 24, 26 Current economic development (economic disparities, globalization) 7 October 1, 3 Current environmental issues (biodiversity, energy/resource challenges, climate change) http://www.worldbank.org/ www.un.org/en/development http://www.imf.org/external/about.htm All material covered since start of class CASE STUDY: “UN Millennium Development Goals Indicator” (Section 9.3.6, pp. 483-484) in Sustainability Comprehensive Foundation (BlackBoard) READ: Chapter 11, Beyond Economic Growth (BlackBoard) 1. “Public and Private Enterprises: Finding the Right Mix” (pp. 76-82) READ: Chapters 9-10, 14, Beyond Economic Growth (BlackBoard) 1. “Industrialization and Postindustrialization” (pp. 63-68) 2. “Urban Air Pollution” (pp. 69-75) 3. “The Risk of Global Climate Change” (pp. 102-109) READ: UN Climate Change Information Kit (BlackBoard) 4 BROWSE: “Biodiversity, Species Loss, and Ecosystem Function” (Section 4.3, pp. 126-134, Biodiversity) in Sustainability: Comprehensive Foundation (BlackBoard) 8 9 10 October 8, 10 October 15 October 17 October 22, 24 11 October 29, 31 12 November 5, 7 13 November 12 Current human development (poverty and social disparities (health, education, human/ women’s/ children’s rights) Test 2 Sustainable development: economic objectives Sustainable development: environmental objectives Sustainable development: social objectives Test 3 http://www.epa.gov/climatechange/index.html http://www.epa.gov/climatestudents http://www.c2es.org http://www.globalchange.gov/what-wedo/assessment CALCULATE: your footprint at home (www.myfootprint.org) and report in class. READ: Human Development Report: 2013 (BlackBoard) Millennium Development Goals Report 2013 (BlackBoard) Chapters 5-8, Beyond Economic Growth (BlackBoard) 1. Income Inequality (pp. 28-32) 2. Poverty and Hunger (pp. 33-42) 3. Education (pp. 43-52) 4. Health and Longevity (pp. 53-62) FALL BREAK All material covered since Test 1 READ: Chapters 16, Beyond Economic Growth (BlackBoard) 1. Indicators of Development Sustainability (pp. 113-122) 2. Development Goals and Strategies (pp. 123-130) READ: “Sustainability and Business” (Section 9.4, pp. 484-489) in Sustainability Comprehensive Foundation (BlackBoard) READ: Back to our Common Future (BlackBoard) READ: “Sustainability: Ethics, Culture, and History” (Chapter 10, pp. 490-524) in Sustainability Comprehensive Foundation (BlackBoard) BROWSE: Universal Declaration of Human Rights http://www.hrea.org/index.php?base_id=104&la nguage_id=1&erc_doc_id=445&category_id=24 &category_type=3&group= Sustainable Human Development Index (post2015): http://www.ssfindex.com/a-sustainablehuman-development-index-in-the-post-2015era/ Sustainable Development (World Bank): http://www.worldbank.org/depweb/english/sd.ht ml All material covered since Test 2 5 In-class case activity November 14 14 November 19 CASE STUDY: “Electronic Waste and Extended Producer Responsibility” (Section 7.3, pp. 279-281) in Sustainability Comprehensive Foundation) (BlackBoard) Presentations (Economic Teams 1, 2, 3, 4 Development) November 21 Presentations (Environmental Teams 5, 6, 7 Conservation) 15 November 26 Teams 8, 9, 10 Presentations (Human (last day of class) Development) THANKSGIVING BREAK November 28 (*) Course material will be adjusted according to the flow of material in the class. We may spend more time on some issues and less time on others, depending on student need. A number of class periods will be partially turned into workshops to apply course material to course projects. COURSE POLICIES: 1. Academic Integrity: Students are expected to be familiar with and adhere to UNCG’s Academic Integrity Policy on all assignments and examinations (http://academicintegrity.uncg.edu/complete). 2. Attendance/Participation/Preparation: Regular attendance, meaningful participation, and being prepared for class (having completed readings prior to class) are all expected. Attendance will not be taken, however, if you miss class, you will miss opportunities to get higher points on class activities (these cannot be made up). Further, if you miss class, it is your responsibility to obtain lecture notes from fellow students. 3. Lateness: Arriving late to class or leaving early are inconsiderate to both your professor and classmates because it is distracting and unprofessional. Please be punctual. 4. Cellphones/Laptops: Students are expected to switch off their phones prior to entering the classroom. A variety of rings, bells, and whistles are an unnecessary distraction. You may keep your phone on only if you are expecting to receive an emergency call, but in this case, please put your phone on “vibrate.” Sending/receiving text messages and surfing the ‘Net during class are not acceptable. Laptops may be used only for course-related purposes. 5. Email communication: When you email me, please use “STH-101-02E – your last name” in the subject heading and use proper email etiquette when addressing/signing your messages. Unsigned/unclear emails will not receive replies. 6. Special needs: Should you have special needs related to a qualified/certified disability, please notify me by the end of the 2nd week of classes so that arrangements can be made to meet those needs. 6