Environmental Studies
Program Goals
The Environmental Studies Program aims to empower students to be agents of change for a sustainable society. We meet this goal by:
- Providing students with an interdisciplinary knowledge and understanding of the world's environmental challenges from scientific, societal, and cultural points of view.
- Preparing students with a diverse skill set for a wide range of environmentally related careers and/or further graduate study.
Applying for the Environmental Studies Major
Students are accepted into the Environmental Studies major by application only. Applications are evaluated for academic achievement, related coursework, and a personal statement that demonstrates a genuine interest and track record in environmental work. Admission is determined by the Steering Committee of the Environmental Studies Program, which includes faculty drawn from many departments.
The deadline for submitting applications is February 6 during the students’ first year. The application form may be found onÌýApply for the MajorÌý±è²¹²µ±ð.
Major Requirements
The ENVS major consists of a minimum of 43 credits, equivalent to at least 14 full-semester courses, as detailed below. ENVS students may choose more than one major, but at least 27 credits for the ENVS major must not be used to fulfill requirements for another major or minor (i.e., 16 credits can be shared). Note that all md´«Ã½¹ú²ú¾ç College majors require at least 27 unique credits, so the number of credits that can be shared will be fewer for majors that require fewer courses, such as most departmental majors (i.e., if a major requires 30 credits, only 3 can be shared).
1. ENVS 2240 Ideas and Practices in Environmental Studies (3 credits)
This course is offered in the fall semester for the new cohort of ENVS majors (sophomores). Ideas and Practices in Environmental Studies provides an introduction to the history, ideas, and practices of the field of environmental studies for new ENVS majors. This interactive course will draw on cross-and inter-disciplinary perspectives from the natural sciences, social sciences, and humanities to explore different ways of thinking about complex environmental topics.Ìý
2. Environmental Systems courses (6 credits):
- EESC2201 Environmental Systems: The Human Footprint (2 credits)
- EESC2202 Environmental Systems: Ecosystems (2 credits)
- EESC2203 Environmental Systems: Water Resources (2 credits)
- EESC2204 Environmental Systems: Carbon Cycle (2 credits)
- EESC2205 Environmental Systems: Climate Change (2 credits)
- EESC2206 Environmental Systems: Oceans (2 credits)
- EESC2207 Environmental Systems: Earthquakes (2 credits)
- EESC2208 Environmental Systems: Quantitative Methods (2 credits)
These are a series of 2-credit half-semester courses that introduce students to the basic concepts of environmental science from a variety of perspectives and professors, with the specific goal of providing students with a foundation for further interdisciplinary study of environmental issues. Students can take one or more of these courses in any given semester. Approved substitutions include EESC1167 for EESC2201, EESC1170 for EESC2203, EESC1174 or EESC1505 for EESC2205, and EESC1157 for EESC2206.
3. One Environmental History Foundation Course (3 credits)
- HIST2406 This Land Is Your Land: US Environmental History
- or HIST 1710 Nature & Power: Making the Modern World Core EQ
- or HIST 4703 Environmental Histories of Water
- or HIST 4705 In the Eye of the Hurricane: An Environmental History of Latin America
Students are encouraged to fulfill the history requirement by their sophomore year. A historical understanding of how humans have related to the natural environment allows students to grasp both the specificity and the contingency of our contemporary ideas about the environment — a core intellectual resource for our work.
4. One Environmental Sociology Foundation Course (3 credits)
- SOCY3562/ENVS3562 Environmental Sociology
Students are encouraged to fulfill the sociology requirement by their junior year. Environmental sociology is a core intellectual resource for thinking through persistent problems in the socially constructed world (like poverty, racism, and migration) and the complex ways these human issues impact and are impacted by the environment and our changing climate.
5. ENVS3360 Research Methods in Environmental Studies
- ENVS3360 Research Methods in Environmental Studies
Students take this course as juniors to encounter and understand a variety of ways that interdisciplinary scientists formulate questions, collect and analyze data, and draw conclusions within environmental studies research. As a cohort, students develop research skills that they will go on to employ in meeting their senior research requirement.
6. One elective (3 credits)
The elective can be used to deepen understanding of the student’s concentration, or to encounter a novel perspective in the environmental field.
7. Senior Research Seminar (4 credits) or Senior Thesis (6 credits)
In their senior year, all ENVS students formulate and carry out a research project. This requirement can be met in one of two ways: through enrollment in the senior research seminar or through completion of a senior thesis.
- Senior Research Seminar (4 credits)
- ENVS4941 Senior Research Seminar [Fall]
- ENVS4942 Senior Research Seminar II [Spring]
- Senior Thesis (6 credits)
- ENVS4951 Senior Thesis I [Fall]
- ENVS4952 Senior Thesis II [Spring]
- ENVS4961 Senior Honors Thesis I [Fall]
- ENVS4962 Senior Honors Thesis II [Spring]
Alternatively, students can undertake an independent research project under the supervision of a faculty advisor who signs on to the project in spring of the junior year.
8. Concentration (18 credits):
Biodiversity Conservation
Two Social Science Courses:
- ENVS3354 Wildlife and Society
- ENVS3324 Conservation Policy and Governance
- SOCY3360 Animals and Society
Two Ecology Courses:
- BIOL1440 Sustaining the Biosphere Core or BIOL 1520 Biodiversity Connections: Biodiversity, Humans and Environment
- BIOL2010 Ecology and Evolution Core
One Upper-Level Ecology Course:
- BIOL4030 Deep Sea Biology
- BIOL4130 Ecology in a Changing Climate
- BIOL5050 Evolution and Development
- BIOL4450 Behavioral Ecology
One Humanities Course:
- ENGL1724 Nature and Power: Reading the American Place Core
- ENGL2202 Beast Literature
- ENVS2445 The Vegetative Soul: The Hidden Life of Plants
- HIST4222 How Animals Saved the World
- HEO2231 Bible and Ecology
- THEO3000 Theological Bioethics: From the Basics to the Future
Climate Change and Societal Adaptation
One Introductory Environmental Science Course:
- EESC1720 Climate & Storytelling in the Age of Climate ChangeÌý
- EESC1174 Climate Change and SocietyÌý
- EESC1501 Global Implications of Climate Change
One Sociology or History Course:
- SOCY1031 Society and Environmental Transformations
- SOCY1501 Global Implications of Climate Change
- SOCY1509 Planet in PerilÌý
- HIST1505 Planet in Peril
- HIST1507 Powering America: Energy, Tech, Environment
- HIST1842 Atlantic World and Environmental Change
Two Upper-Level Environmental Science Courses:
- EESC3310 Earth System Science and Sustainability
- EESC3396 The IPCC Scientific Assessment
- EESC4464 Environmental Data Exploration and Analysis
- EESC5535 Coastal Processes
- EESC5599 Climate Change Debates
- ENVS3340 Alternative Energy
Two Upper-Level Social Sciences or Humanities Courses:
- ARTS2207 Urban Design for Complexity and Sustainability
- ECON3391 Economics of Energy and the Environment
- ENVS3355 Sustainable Cities
- INTL2260 International Environmental Science and Policy
- PHIL3690 Energy Justice: Ethics, Economics, and the Environment
- PHIL5515 How to Save the World: Ethics of Climate Change
- POLI2531 Energy Politics in U.S., Comparative and Global Perspective
Food and Water Sustainability
Three Courses on Agricultural systems and Watersheds:
- EESC3310 Agroecology
- ENVS3315 Sustainable Agriculture
- EESC1170 Rivers and the Environment
One Environmental Science Course:
- EESC2297 Environmental Hydrology
- EESC3380 Environmental Oceanography
- EESC4400 Geomorphology and Landscape Change
One Social Science Course:
- COMM4470 Communication, Capitalism, Consumerism
- ENVS3345 Environment and Public Health
- ENVS3356 Seminar in Environmental Law
- ENVS3331 Geopolitics of Water
One Humanities Course:
- ARTS2207 Urban Design for Complexity and Sustainability
- HIST2044 A Material and Cultural History of Food in China
- HIST4254 Century of Famine
- HIST4702 Feast or Famine
- HIST4703 Environmental Histories of Water
- PHIL5534 Environmental Ethics
- THEO2231 The Bible and Ecology
- THEO5429 Theology and Ecology
Environmental Communication
Craft Courses (at least 6 credits drawn from the courses listed below):
- ARTS1161 Photography I or ARTS1163 Introduction to Digital Photography
- COMM2204 Digital Media Fundamentals or COMM2221 Digital Media Field Production
- COMM2213 Fundamentals of Audio I
- ENGL4201 Science Writing
- FILM1171 Filmmaking I
- FILM2230 Video Art
- JOUR2225 Journalism and New Media
- JOUR2232 Investigative Journalism
- JOUR2246 Podcasting: The Art and Craft of Digital Storytelling
- JOUR2261/ENVS2261 Environmental Journalism: Science, Society, Solutions
Critical Courses (at least 6 credits drawn from the courses listed below):
- ARTH/ENVS4316 History of Scientific Illustration
- COMM2203 Image as Communication
- COMM2265 Theory, History and Practice of Talk Media
- COMM2278 Social Media
- COMM3377 Visual Communication Theory
- COMM4470 Communication, Consumerism, Capitalism
- ENGL3358 The Great Acceleration: Contemporary Fiction and Climate Change
- ENGL4028 Climate Fiction
- ENGL4280 Beast Literature
- ENGL6045 Seminar: Animal Worlds in the Middle Ages
Environmental Entrepreneurship
One Course on Micro/Macroeconomics:
- ECON1101 Principles of Economics Core
Two Environmental Economics Courses:
- ECON2212 Geographic Information Systems for Planning and Decision-Making
- ECON2278 Environmental Economics OR ECON2277 Environmental Economics & Policy
- ECON3348 Economics of Electricity Markets
- ECON3391 Economics of Energy & the Environment (ECON2201 and ECON2228 are prerequisites)
One Sociology Course:
- SOCY3322 Consumption, Health, and the Environment
- SOCY3661 Urban Sociology
One Humanities Course:
- HIST2703 Is All Commerce Capitalism?
- HIST2702 Colonial Pasts/Global Presents
- PHIL5901 The Ethics of Capitalism
- SCHI3200 The Ethics of Sustainability and the Future of the Common Good
One Management Course:
- BSLW3345 Managing for Social Impact & the Public Good
- MGMT2137 Managing Diversity
- MGMT2139 Social Innovation & Entrepreneurship
- MGMT2265 Globalization, Culture, & Ethics
Environmental Health
One Environmental Health Course:
- ENVS3345 Environment and Public Health
One Ethics Course:
- PHIL3690 Energy Justice: Ethics, Economics, and the Environment
- PHIL5534 Environmental Ethics
- THEO3223 The Ethics of Global Public Health and the Common Good
One Nursing Course:
- NURS3210 Contemporary Issues in Public Health
- NURS5350 Global Health Care: Meeting Challenges and Perspectives
One Biology Course:
- BIOL1480 Pathogens and Plagues
- BIOL3090 Foundations of Microbiology (requires BIOL2000)
One History Course:
- AADS4485/HIST4485 History of Medicine and Public Health
- HIST4741 Opium Past and Present
One Social Science Course:
- ENVS2246 Earth Ethics: Morality, Religion, and Social Justice
- ENVS2501 State of Affordable Housing in the States
- NURS1210 Public Health in a Global Society
- PHCG2130 Global Public Health Law
- PHCG4140 Children’s Health and the Environment
- SOCY1002 Introduction to Sociology for Healthcare Professions
- SOCY1078 Sociology of Health and Illness
- SOCY3322 Consumption, Health, and the Environment
Environmental Justice and Policy
One Introductory Environmental Law & Policy Course:
- ENVS/UNAS2256 Environmental Law and Policy
- POLI 2441 Comparative Politics of Development
- POLI 2446 Natural Resource Politics
- POLI 2531 Politics of Energy and Climate in US and International Perspectives
- ENVS3324 Conservation Policy and Governance
- ENVS3356 Seminar in Environmental Law
- ENVS4408 Democracy and the Environment
- INTL2230/ENVS2230 Geographies of Nature and the Environment
- INTL3340 Environmental Politics of the Middle East
- SOCY1072 Inequality in America
- SOCY1501 Global Implications of Climate Change Core
- ENVS3328 Global Environmental Justice and Conservation
- PHIL3690 Energy Justice: Ethics, Economics, and the Environment
- SCHI3200 The Ethics of Sustainability and the Future of the Common Good
- SCHI5020 Exploring the Climate-Energy-Sustainability-Policy Nexus
- SOCY/AADS3400 Food Justice Across the African Diaspora
- SOCY3346 Environmental Justice
Ìý
Minor Requirements
The ENVS minor consists of 19 credits, with at least 15 credits being used solely for the ENVS requirements.
A. EESC2201 Environmental Systems: The Human Footprint (plus lab; 2 credits)
B. One of the following courses (plus lab; 2 credits):
- EESC2202 Environmental Systems: Ecosystems
- EESC2203 Environmental Systems: Water Resources
- EESC2204 Environmental Systems: Carbon Cycle
- EESC2205 Environmental Systems: Climate Change
- EESC2206 Environmental Systems: Oceans
- EESC2207 Environmental Systems: Earthquakes
- EESC2208 Environmental Systems: Quantitative Methods
C. Two foundation courses (6 credits)
One in Research Methods:
- ENVS3360 Research Methods in Environmental Studies
One in the Social Sciences or Humanities:
- ECON2277 Environmental Economics and Policy
- ECON2278 Environmental Economics
- ENVS/UNAS2256 Environmental Law and Policy
- HIST2406/ENVS2406 The Land Is Your Land: U.S. Environmental History
- INTL2260 International Environmental Science and Policy
- MGMT2145 Environmental Management
- SOCY1031 Society and Environmental Transformations
- SOCY1501 Global Implications of Climate Change
- SOCY1509 Planet in Peril: History and Future of Human Impact
- SOCY2200 Statistics (or a different statistics course)
- SOCY3562 Environmental Sociology
- PHIL3690 Energy Justice: Ethics, Economics, and the Environment
- PHIL5515 How to Save the World: Ethics of Climate Change
D. At least 6 credits (two courses) of electives.
At least 3 credits must be from courses numbered 3000 and above.
E. ENVS4943 Environmental Seminar, a 3-credit senior seminar offered every spring semester
ÌýTo register for the minor, contact the Environmental Studies Program at envstudy@bc.edu, or stop by the program office in Devlin 213. For more information see the program website at /content/bc-web/schools/mcas/sites/envstudies.html.
Information for First-Year Students
First-year students who are considering applying to become Environmental Studies majors should consider taking University Core courses with an environmental focus.
Information for Study Abroad
ENVS majors are encouraged to take advantage of study abroad opportunities. Studying outside of the U.S. provides a global perspective on environmental and sustainability issues and educational opportunities not available at BC. ENVS students are allowed 3–6 credits (one to two courses) per semester abroad to count toward the major or minor requirements. If a student is doing a program specifically designed for Environmental Studies, more than 6 credits (two courses) may be approved. Students must meet with their academic advisor and the ENVS Director or Associate Director prior to leaving for their study abroad experience.
For further information see the program website at bc.edu/envstudies, contact the Environmental Studies Program at envstudy@bc.edu, or stop by the program office in Devlin 213.