Sustainable Development - Ideas and Imaginaries

Instructor: Bo Fritzbøger

Skills you'll gain

  •   Timelines
  •   Ethical Standards And Conduct
  •   Liberal Arts
  •   Environment
  •   Political Sciences
  •   Culture
  •   Social Sciences
  •   Systems Thinking
  •   Economics, Policy, and Social Studies
  • There are 4 modules in this course

    The present-day concept and ideal of sustainable development contains many interlaced meanings and many contradictions. In order to bring out the concept’s indisputable transformative potential, and be able to gain support, promote decision-making and take action in it, it is, therefore, requisite to disentangle this mélange and shed light to the implicit preunderstandings . This course will contribute to doing so by focusing on the historical roots and multiple layers of meaning of sustainable development, and by exploring questions such as: ‘What is the historical background of the current Sustainable Development Goals?’, ‘Which imaginaries about relations between individual and collective tend to promote and prevent sustainable solutions?’, ‘How can ideas about humans and nature affect global development?’, And ‘how do we as humans react on inconstant notions of time and change?’ During this course, you will meet associate professor in history Bo Fritzbøger from Centre for Sustainable Futures as the primary lecturer and a range of cultural, natural and social scientists, all from the University of Copenhagen working with different aspects of sustainability thinking. We hope that you will join us in the course and qualify your participation in current discussions about how to achieve common sustainable development in a divided world.

    Ideas about individuals and society

    Ideas about relations between humans and nature

    Ideas about time and change

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