Bachelor of Arts and Science (Honours) in Interdisciplinary Studies with Concentration in Environment in Politics and Culture

Lakehead University - Orillia Campus

Canada,Ontario

 0 Shortlist

48 Months

Duration

CAD 30,468/year

Tuition Fee

CAD 135

Application Fee

Jan 2025

Apply Date

Canada, Ontario

Type: University

Location Type: Rural

Founded: 1965

Total Students: 7,975 +

Int. Students: 550 +

Campus Detail

Main Campus Address

500 University Ave, Orillia, ON L3V 0B9, Canada

Bachelor of Arts and Science (Honours) in Interdisciplinary Studies with Concentration in Environment in Politics and Culture

Program Overview

Our Interdisciplinary Studies program is flexible in its design, allowing you to customize your educational experience. You will be encouraged to think beyond the confines of a traditional undergraduate degree and take a range of courses in different disciplines that are oriented to your individual career aspirations.

As an Interdisciplinary Studies major, you can choose any two disciplinary areas from the following:

  • Anthropology
  • Biology
  • Criminology
  • English
  • General Science
  • Geography
  • History
  • Media, Film and Communications
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology

You will develop advanced critical thinking skills, problem-solving strategies and specialized knowledge pertaining to a variety of topics. We also offer the ability to pursue concentrations in Environment in Politics and Culture, Human Nature, Social Justice, and International Conflict and Human Rights.

You may also choose to combine your degree with a Concurrent Education degree that allows you to teach Primary-Junior grades. If you are thinking about teaching in the future, our Interdisciplinary Program provides the broad range of knowledge necessary to teach at the Primary-Junior level.

Environment in Politics and Culture

The Environmental in Politics and Culture concentration offers students a blended approach that combines disciplinary courses in social science, science, and the humanities with interdisciplinary questions such as:

  • What makes a community? How do communities live well in place?
  • What groups are most affected by environmental problems? Who is responsible? Who should make the decisions for environmental and community planning? Who should bear the costs?
  • What role do government, law, and policy play in prevention, management, and remediation of environmental challenges? How do local efforts relate to global systems?
  • How do we reconcile immediate interests with long-term challenges? Local needs with distant ones? Inequality with economic growth?
  • Why is it so hard to create social change on environmental issues? What roles could be played by formal and informal education, art, media, story-telling, and popular culture?

Environmental problems are complex.  In this concentration, students ask broad questions about how we come to be facing environmental problems and the ethical, political, and cultural challenges they pose. Topics include social and environmental justice in food and agroecology sovereignty movements, gendered approaches to the environment, animal rights and representation, and the challenges of what it means to be an environmental educator inside and outside a classroom.

The program of study emerges from social science and humanities approaches to the environment, focusing on the ethical, political, social and cultural challenges posed by environmental problems, political organization and governance structures involved in social change, and the cultural frameworks through which environment has been understood in various periods, places, media, and aesthetic modes. Students will use problem-based learning to explore effective responses to environmental problems in contexts such as local governance, political organizing, policy development, art, media, popular culture, storytelling, and formal and informal education.

The Environment in Politics and Culture concentration appeals to individuals who are community and volunteer-oriented and willing to engage as citizens and problem-solvers on the state of their lived environments. It would also appeal to active and life-long learners, educators, artists, writers, and politically active individuals. This concentration leads to work, career, community, and further study opportunities in the fields of education, public service, the charity and not-for-profit sector, law and policy development, community organizing, media and journalism, law, and the arts.