ENVS 154 - 01 Amazonian Cultures and Conservation
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Class Details
- Career
- Undergraduate
- Grading
- Student Option
- Class Number
- 31576
- Type
- Lecture
- Instruction Mode
- In Person
- Credits
- 5 units
- General Education
- CC
- Status
Open
- Available Seats
- 2
- Enrollment Capacity
- 35
- Enrolled
- 33
- Wait List Capacity
- 0
- Wait List Total
- 0
Description
The Amazon rainforest in South America is one of the most biologically and culturally diverse biomes on the planet, playing a critical role in the global carbon cycle and hemispheric hydrological systems. Its survival is threatened by oil, mining, agribusiness, logging and other forms of extraction -- activities that perpetuate violence, dispossession and environmental injustice against Indigenous peoples. This course centers the cultural richness, ecological care, political advocacy, and complex livelihoods of Native Amazonian societies, focusing on the lessons they offer for more just and anti-colonial approaches to conservation.
Enrollment Requirements
Prerequisite(s): previous or concurrent enrollment in ENVS 100 and ENVS 100L, or permission of instructor.
Meeting Information
| Days & Times |
Room |
Instructor |
Meeting Dates |
| MW 04:15PM-05:45PM |
ISB 221 |
Lu,F.E. |
01/05/26 - 03/13/26 |
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