Academics

Environmental Science and Policy 2009-2010

Visit the Environmental Science and Policy web site.

Environmental Science and Policy News


Alum's project to help black farmers wins national award

Geologist finds valuable treasure in French Guyana

Earth Day a good time to size up College's carbon footprint

Union-coached STEP teams to compete at statewide conference this weekend

Hudson River advocate to open 'Water and Society' series

More News & Events

Overview

The Environmental Science and Policy program is designed for students with a strong interest in understanding and solving environmental problems. The program provides students the opportunity to explore areas of environmental policy and environmental science. Students will find this program useful if they enter environmental science or environmental management in the public and private sectors, teaching, business, politics, or law.

The Environmental Science and Policy program gives an overview of many of the diverse aspects of modern environmental issues, including science, technology, public policy, and economics. It also gives enough depth in a chosen discipline so that a graduate is reasonably accomplished and well-versed in that discipline. The program is rigorous, while being flexible enough to accommodate a wide range of interests in this complex and constantly changing field.

There are two tracks in the program: Environmental Policy and Environmental Science. Both require a number of core courses and then a specialty concentration of five courses, the senior seminar of one course, and a senior thesis or project of two courses.

The core is a series of courses in the sciences, social sciences, mathematics, and technology that are of fundamental importance for understanding environmental issues. These subjects, for which there is significant flexibility, are first-rate courses that examine the environment variously in terms of biological interaction, the forces of nature and their effect on human activities, human responses to the environment, social and economic changes and concerns related to the environment, and solutions to environmental problems. These courses are taught in several departments, including biology, geology, chemistry, economics, political science, sociology, philosophy, mechanical engineering, and mathematics. The core curriculum gives all majors a common basis for discussion in the environmental studies community.

The core is supplemented by in-depth study in an established department, such as sociology, biology, geology, or economics. The course of study in the area of concentration is equivalent to a minor, but is designed in cooperation with a faculty advisor in the chosen department. The area of concentration gives substantial depth of knowledge in a field that is important for understanding and solving current environmental problems. Seniors complete a two-term independent research project that applies understanding gained from the core curriculum and from the area of concentration toward an environmental topic of interest.

The culmination of the program is the Senior Seminar in which contemporary environmental issues are discussed, debated, researched, and documented in a lively, sometimes heated, atmosphere that includes round table discussions, invited speakers, field trips, mock trials, and other means to understand the effect of the environment on modern society, and to understand how solutions to environmental problems work in the real world. Discussions include, but are not limited to, points of law, the regulatory environment and perceptions of environmental issues, analysis of simple and complex data, scientific interpretations and areas of study, mathematical models, and various types of forecasting. The senior research projects, completed in the area of concentration, are presented by their authors and opened to questions and debate.

Students have opportunities for internships during the senior year either as a required part of the Senior Seminar, or as part of a senior research project. Examples of recently completed internships include ones at Schenectady County Planning Department, the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, and the Five Rivers Environmental Education Center in Delmar, New York.

For more information, visit:
http://minerva.union.edu/env/ES_home.htm

PROGRAM DIRECTOR:

Donald T. Rodbell
Professor of Geology
Ph.D., University of Colorado

Paleoclimatology

FACULTY:

Barbara Boyer
Professor of Biology
Ph.D., University of Michigan

Jaclyn Cockburn
Visiting Assistant Professor of Geology
Ph.D., Queens University

Surface processes

Jeffrey Corbin
Assistant Professor of Biology
Ph.D., University of North Carolina

Ecology

John Garver
Professor of Geology
Ph.D., University of Washington

Tectonics, evolution of mountain systems

Michael Hagerman
Associate Professor of Chemistry
Ph.D., Northwestern University

Inorganic chemistry

Kurt Hollocher
Professor of Geology
Ph.D., University of Massachusetts

Geochemistry

Leslie Hull
Professor of Chemistry
Ph.D., Harvard University

Organic chemistry

Ilene Kaplan
Professor of Sociology
Ph.D., Princeton University

Maritime policy

James Kenney
Professor of Economics
Ph.D., Stanford

Environmental economics

Kathleen LoGiudice
Associate Professor of Biology
Ph.D., Rutgers University

Ecology

Laura MacManus-Spencer
Assistant Professor of Chemistry
Ph.D., University of Minnesota

Environmental chemistry

Andrew Morris
Assistant Professor of History
Ph.D., University of Virginia

History of Environmental Movement

Steven Rice
Associate Professor of Biology
Ph.D., Duke University

Terrestrial ecology

George Shaw
Professor of Geology
Ph.D., University of Washington

Geochemistry

Peter Tobiessen
Professor Emeritus of Biology
Ph.D., Duke University

Terrestrial and freshwater ecology

Thomas Werner
Professor Emeritus of Chemistry
Ph.D., MIT

Analytical chemistry

Richard Wilk
Professor of Mechanical Engineering
Ph.D., Drexel

Pollution control, solar energy