Search: Geography, Social Sciences and Humanities

9 results

Results

Watts, Michael

Name of Person: 
Michael Watts
Picture: 
Watts.jpg
Department: 
Geography, Professor
Research Interests: 
Political economy, political ecology, Africa, South Asia, development, peasant societies, social and cultural theory, U.S. agriculture, Islam and social movements

Hsing, You-Tien

Name of Person: 
You-Tien Hsing
Picture: 
Y_Hsing.jpg
Department: 
Geography, Assistant Professor
Research Interests: 
You-tien Hsing's research and teaching has been focused on political economy of development in East Asia and China. She has published works on cultural-historical processes of capital flows in East Asia. She is now working on the territorial politics of land and state-society dynamism in Chinese cities and rural towns
Achievements: 
Hsing’s research and teaching has been focused on the political economy of development in East Asia, especially China. Her book, Making Capitalism in China: The Taiwan Connection (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998) analyzes the cultural and institutional configuration in the processes of Taiwanese direct investment in southern China in the 1990s. In the last few years she extended this work in two directions. The first one concerns the politics of growth in Chinese cities and towns. In her upcoming book temporarily entitled The Politics of Land Development in Chinese Cities, Hsing discusses the issue of land rights and the territorial power consolidation of the local state in China’s late socialist transformation. The second project, which she started this year, focuses on telecommunication as a technological, political-economic, as well as social-cultural platform in China’s interaction with the global.

Hart, Gillian

Name of Person: 
Gillian Hart
Picture: 
GHart.jpg
Department: 
Geography, Professor
Research Interests: 
Political economy, social theory, critical development studies, gender, agrarian and regional studies, labor, Southern Africa, Southeast Asia.
Achievements: 
Gillian Hart is dean of the Center for African Studies and Chair of the undergraduate major in Development Studies. A native of South Africa, she is author of a number of publications on comparative development in her native country and globally. Her book Disabling Globalization: Places of Power in Post-Apartheid South Africa (University of California Press, 2002) traces divergent post-apartheid dynamics in two towns and adjacent townships, and their connections with East Asia. She has also published numerous papers on critical ethnographies of power and neoliberal globalization, as well as on rural-urban linkages. Most notably, this includes the paper “Beyond the Urban-Rural Divide: Linking Land, Labour, and Livelihoods,” Transformation (55) 2004 (with Ari Sitas).

Nature and Culture: Social Theory, Social Practice, and the Environment

Department: 
GEOG
Course Number: 
203
Course Title: 
Nature and Culture: Social Theory, Social Practice, and the Environment
Instructor: 
Sayre
Description: 
The relationship between societies and natural environments lies at the heart of geographical inquiry and has gained urgency as the rate and scale of human transformation of nature have grown, often outstripping our understanding of causes and effects. The physical side of environmental science has received most of the emphasis in university research, but the social basis of environmental change must be studied as well. Recent developments in social theory have much to offer environmental studies, while the latter has, in turn, exploded many formerly safe assumptions about how and what the social sciences and humanities ought to be preoccupied with. This seminar allows students to explore some classics in environmental thought as well as recent contributions that put the field on the forefront of social knowledge today.
Units: 
4
Course Type: 
Graduate

What Is in a Rim? Geography of Social and Economic Development in East Asia

Department: 
GEOG
Course Number: 
153
Course Title: 
What Is in a Rim? Geography of Social and Economic Development in East Asia
Instructor: 
Hsing
Description: 
This course focuses on development issues in East and Southeast Asia. Topics include the colonial legacy in Southeast Asia, the ups and downs of the "developmental state," women and labor, and the environment. It also takes a critical view of the presentation and representation of East Asia, examining the construction of geographical terms such as Pacific Rim and Greater China. Students are expected to participate and make thoughtful contributions to class discussions. This is a lecture course designed mainly for upper-level undergraduate students with backgrounds in East Asian studies or development studies
Units: 
3
Course Type: 
Undergraduate

Political Ecology of the Third World

Department: 
GEOG
Course Number: 
138
Course Title: 
Political Ecology of the Third World
Description: 
Political factors affecting ecological conditions in the Third World. Topics include environmental degradation, migrations, agricultural production, role of international aid, divergence in standard of living, political power, participation and decision making, access to resources, global environmental policies and treaties, political strife and war.
Units: 
4
Offered: 
Fall and Spring
Course Type: 
Undergraduate

World Regions, Peoples, and States

Department: 
GEOG
Course Number: 
10
Course Title: 
World Regions, Peoples, and States
Instructor: 
Sayre
Description: 
This course will provide a framework for recognizing and analyzing the major distinctive regions of the world in comparative context. The most important interrelations between environment, economy, ethnicity, and the national identity and viability of states will be explored.
Units: 
4
Course Type: 
Undergraduate

World Peoples and Cultural Environments

Department: 
GEOG
Course Number: 
4
Course Title: 
World Peoples and Cultural Environments
Description: 
Historical and contemporary cultural-environmental patterns. The development and spread of cultural adaptations, human use of resources, transformation and creation of human environments.
Units: 
4
Course Type: 
Undergraduate

Global Environments

Department: 
GEOG
Course Number: 
1
Course Title: 
Global Environments
Instructor: 
Byrne
Description: 
The global pattern of climate, landforms, vegetation, and soils. The relative importance of natural and human-induced change, global warming, forest clearance, accelerated soil erosion, glacial/postglacial climate change and its consequences.
Units: 
4
Course Type: 
Undergraduate