2023/2024 KAN-CPOLO2053U Governing the Green Transition
English Title | |
Governing the Green Transition |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Mandatory (also offered as elective) |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Start time of the course | Spring |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Study board |
Study Board for BSc/MSc i International Business and Politics,
MSc
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Last updated on 07-06-2023 |
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Course content, structure and pedagogical approach | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Climate change is the most important challenge facing humanity today, reconfiguring our economies and societies across the globe. Addressing climate change through the green transition will entail significant change and conflict. What does that change and conflict look like, and why? Which political actors and interests are involved, and how do they compete for influence over green standards and norms? The Organizing Global Markets: The Green Transition course focuses on these questions, examining professional and organizational competition as markets change to bring in the green transition.
The OGM course develops your understanding of different issues on the green transition, drawing on state of the art research (including faculty’s own), providing cases on green investment, sustainability consulting, climate activism, taxation and the climate breakdown, plastics, food, and others. We will also bring in subject-matter experts who work directly with the green transition across consulting, finance and policy.
The OGM course also develops your analytical capacity to understand who gets the upper hand, and how professional networks underpin policy and market arrangements for the green transition. You will be trained in how to analyze who has influence in green transition issues, and you will develop a paper tracing such influence. Students will receive dedicated feedback from faculty to test their arguments and cases throughout the course.
The course is directed at those who want to develop their analytical capacities for thinking about how macro political and economic processes, which enable and constrain the green transition, are linked to micro and meso-level mechanisms of competition and coordination among experts and authorities. The OGM course is especially suited to those who wish to have a career in consulting and policy that is linked to the green transition.
In relation to Nordic Nine The Governing the Green Transition course supports the Nordic Nine capabilities by teaching analytical approaches to understand humanity’s challenges, climate change specifically, and how they may be resolved (NN3). The course provides the means to explain the social and politico-economic structures that replicate prosperity and inequality over generations (NN7). The stress in the course on climate-vulnerable and climate-forcing assets also helps students examine how local communities create value from global connections (NN9). |
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Description of the teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Lectures, exercises, class discussion | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback during the teaching period | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
The course offers continuous feedback and establishes an ongoing dialogue with students. Particular feedback includes: a) direct feedback on learning attainment during sessions; b) the use of in-class discussion and quizzes in live lecture sessions; c) focused feedback on ‘work in progress’ presentations of arguments and evidence; d) engagement via regular office hours in person or online. Feedback is given to explain how particular answers and arguments can be improved. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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