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Academic Year: | 2018/9 |
Owning Department/School: | Department of Economics |
Credits: | 6 [equivalent to 12 CATS credits] |
Notional Study Hours: | 120 |
Level: | Honours (FHEQ level 6) |
Period: |
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Assessment Summary: | EX 100% |
Assessment Detail: |
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Supplementary Assessment: |
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Requisites: | Before taking this module you must take ES20011 AND take ES20013 |
Description: | Aims: The objective of this unit is to provide an overview of the modern theory of environmental economics and natural resource use, with reference to empirical evidence and with applications to contemporary issues in environmental and natural resource management. The theory of resource use is based on principles of dynamic optimisation and an introduction to the appropriate techniques is provided; however, emphasis is placed on the economic interpretation of the results rather than on formal proofs. The strategic interaction among agents is analysed based on concepts of cooperative and non-cooperative game theory; again the emphasis is on the economic intuition of these concepts. The unit can be taken in conjunction with ES30031 Environmental Economics in Semester 1 to form a stream in environmental and natural resource economics, but the units can also be taken independently of each other. Learning Outcomes: By the end of this unit, students should be able to * understand the normative and positive policy implications of different welfare measurements and develop a critical view on them; * provide an account of the principles of efficient natural resource use over time; * explain why observed patterns of natural resource use are often inefficient; * examine some key current problems in natural resource use and management, including climate change and fishery management; * show the relationship between national and transboundary environmental and resource problems in terms of different approaches in solving these problems; * be able to use learned concepts to apply them to other environmental and resource economic problems. Skills: Ability to enter into a critical debate on topics covered in the unit. The following are facilitated and assessed: abstract reasoning; information synthesis; diagrammatic skills; writing skills; numeracy skills. Content: The topics covered are: * the classification of natural resources; * a primer on techniques of dynamic optimisation, illustrated in the context of climate change; * studying the efficient use of biological resources, illustrated with fisheries; * management and political issues for biological resources and climate change: using game theory to understand property rights regimes, the 'tragedy of the commons' and enforcement issues in the transnational context; * important policy issues related to climate change and international fishery agreements and international environmental agreements in general; * extinction and biodiversity. |
Programme availability: |
ES30032 is Optional on the following programmes:Department of Economics
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Notes:
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