2023/2024 KAN-CSOCV1026U Re-Imagining Capitalism. Towards Just and Sustainable Futures
English Title | |
Re-Imagining Capitalism. Towards Just and Sustainable Futures |
Course information |
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Language | English |
Course ECTS | 7.5 ECTS |
Type | Elective |
Level | Full Degree Master |
Duration | One Semester |
Start time of the course | Autumn |
Timetable | Course schedule will be posted at calendar.cbs.dk |
Max. participants | 100 |
Study board |
Study Board for MSc in Social Sciences
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Course coordinator | |
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Main academic disciplines | |
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Teaching methods | |
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Last updated on 10-05-2023 |
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Learning objectives | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The course is aligned with and responds to CBS
strategy around the "Nordic Nine", to build capabilities
for a positive and sustainable future. In this sense, the course
"Reimagining Capitalism" aims at analysing today's
societal challenges and helping the students to build a set of
analytical and critical tools to solve them. Moreover, the course
focuses on the ethical dilemmas that the students will most likely
encounter in their professional life and aims at helping them to
identify sustainable and responsible ways to overcome them.
Furthermore, the way the course is designed - with some key texts
and ideas presented and then the students having to collectively
discuss them together with the final exam being a critical essay on
a topic of the student choosing - is in line with the idea that
students must be critical when thinking and constructive when
collaborating. Finally, the central idea of the course - that we
must reimagine the ways in which our societies and economies work,
if we are to tackle today's challenges - implies a sense of
responsibility for the future generations and the idea that local
communities, when interconnected in global networks, can become
catalysers of positive change.
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Examination | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Course content, structure and pedagogical approach | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
In order to critically understand the ongoing multiple crises on the economic, social and environmental level and in order to envision sustainable and just futures, an understanding of the current socio-economic system, namely capitalism, is a fundamental and foundational prerequisite.
In the last years, and especially after the North-Atlantic financial crisis of 2007-2008, many scholars and observers have underlined the need to re-imagine our economies, their underlying logic, and their functioning mechanisms. Even the economic newspaper Financial Times has recently launched a media campaign and a column titled “Capitalism: Time for a Reset” encouraging business leaders to challenge the past decade's dominant business tenets of infinite growth and profits, and opening up the debate on topics such as the ethics of investing, the risk in big technology and the future of the corporate world.
As a response to this emerging awareness, many individuals, communities and organizations around the world are experimenting with new governance structures, with "purpose-driven" ways of doing business, with alternative ways of producing and consuming goods, and with non-conventional lifestyles. Some of these practices come from local, self-organized, grassroots societal niches but have the potential to disrupt the status quo by prefiguring in the present a better society for the future. For this reason, it is important to get to know them and interpret them not only as niches of innovation, but as seeds of scalable social and economic change.
The underlying “big” question to the course is the following:
Can we re-imagine and reform contemporary capitalism “from within” to make it a more just and sustainable system, or do we need to implement a totally new socio-economic system, a system able to sustain the flourishing of human and non-human life throughout the 21st century?
The course is organized in three main blocks.
The first part titled “Theories and Critiques of Capitalism” will allow the students to define capitalism and understand its evolution over the course of modern history until today. In this part, we will also get an overview of the main critiques posed to capitalism by classical and contemporary social theory and by civil society. In parallel with these theoretical debates, we will learn how to frame, in light of the functioning of contemporary capitalism, some of the most pressing societal issues such as the ecological crisis in the Anthropocene, the call for more equality and recognition by feminist social movements and LGBTQI communities, and the sky-rocketing inequalities between the Global North and South.
This will allow us to transition to the second block titled “Transformative Practices Towards Just and Sustainable Societies”. In fact, after the critique, the pars destruens, comes the pars construens: the proposal for alternatives. In this part, mostly based on case study discussions of existing communities, firms, networks, social movements and organizations, students will learn about the values, logics, strategies, practices, risks and challenges to ameliorate our economies and societies. Among the empirical case studies deployed, we find the case of the biggest and oldest intentional community in the world, Auroville in the South of India, the case of social and solidarity economy in the Global South, the case of "conscious" companies such as Tony Chocolonely or Patagonia, and, finally, the case of local democracy and local municipalism inspired by Kate Raworth's "doughnut economics" model. Most of the sessions in this part will include the participation of (in person or online) invited guests from civil society, the public and the private sector to share their experience and reflections on how to transform organizations and communities towards a more just and sustainable world.
The third and final part of the course is titled “Future Imaginaries and Conclusions”. In this part we will discuss – inspired by speculative and sci-fi recounts present in books, movies and pop-culture - how the future of our societies and economies will look like. The growing use of artificial intelligence, robots, the metaverse, automation, for instance, is fostering a vibrant debate on the seemingly uselessness of human work and on the potentialities and risks resulting from the increasing intelligence of robots. Similarly, apocalyptic recounts on the potential consequences of climate change and the destruction of natural habitats are thought provoking and alarming. What will human societies look like in the future? How can we steer positive change to avoid ecological and social catastrophes? Shall we shift our values, beliefs and the idea that humankind is the dominant species on this planet? This final part of the course will encourage us to use our creative and critical minds to tackle important and fascinating issues. Contemporary sci-fi movies and books will be used to stimulate our discussions.
Each lecture is divided in two parts: during the first part the lecturer will expose the main ideas and theories, and in the second part the students will work in groups to discuss one of the key readings or a case presented during the lecture.
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Description of the teaching methods | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
The course will combine a variety of methods,
ranging from traditional lectures, games, discussions, creative
learning exercises, case studies, reading groups, and group
presentations.
Students must read the essential reading material (listed in the course syllabus) before every class and are expected to actively participate during each session. |
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Feedback during the teaching period | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Feedback is crucial for learning. In each class session, students will be engaged in active group exercises and discussions, where a series of peer-to-peer feedback tools will be practiced. Furthermore, feedback will be given to the entire class by the teacher at the beginning and end of each session. Finally, office hours (that students can attend individually or in group) will provide an opportunity for further personalised feedback. Two extra "coffee-hours" will be organised, respectively at the beginning and at the end of the course, to provide the students with the opportunity of meeting the teacher in an informal setting and in group to discuss themes emerged in class, ideas for the final essay, or potential ideas for master theses. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Student workload | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Further Information | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Course Faculty: Lara Monticelli (course coordinator and main lecturer) |
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Expected literature | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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