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  • 3.00 Credits

    Is your house on the Wasatch Fault? Is it likely to be flooded, or buried by a landslide? How likely are tornadoes in the Salt Lake Valley? This course examines the physical principles of naturally occurring geologic and weather processes, methods of investigating hazards, techniques for assessing risk, and methods of mitigation. Course focuses on earthquakes, landslides, floods, debris flows and other hazards. Lectures will draw on Utah examples of these hazards whenever possible, and present current understanding the magnitude of the hazard, areas at risk, recurrence intervals, and mitigation measures. Homework projects will be directed towards identifying global and local areas where hazards exist.
  • 3.00 Credits

    An introduction to how and why qualitative methods are used in research. Students will gain experience with techniques such as interviewing, focus groups, participatory and community-based research, archival analysis, and discourse and content analyses. Addresses questions of ethics, subjectivity, power relations, and research presentation.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course explores how physical geography/environments impact urban development and how urban development in turn influences physical environments. The course applies earth systems science to urban geography issues. Students explore the interrelation of both, dynamic physical environments and urban settings. Cities across the globe and Salt Lake City are used to illustrate the interrelatedness of the geosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere, and anthrosphere.
  • 3.00 Credits

    The class approaches resource conservation and environmental management from a geographic perspective and focuses on human-environmental interactions. The course considers the challenges currently facing resource conservationists, the science used to recognize environmental problems, and possible methods to prevent or mitigate the overuse of natural resources. Students in this course study a wide range of topics including food, waste, water, and energy. Expert guest speakers and field trips are incorporated into the class.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Graduate students should enroll in GEOG 5368 or GEO 5368 and will be held to higher standards and/or more work. This class provides an introduction to critical energy issues facing our planet, with a focus on controversial topics and issues in Utah. These may include: hydraulic fracturing (fracking), offshore oil and gas development, oil shale and tar sand development, nuclear energy, renewable energy technologies such as wind and geothermal, the smart grid, difficulties in commercializing new energy technologies, air pollution, transportation choices, energy policy development, and global issues including population dynamics, climate change, carbon management, water resources, the Law of Unintended Consequences, and tipping points. A number of outstanding guest lecturers will provide expertise in their respective fields.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course will provide training in the physical, chemical, and biological factors that sustain streams and riparian areas. Social, Political and economic factors will be considered in the context of conservation and restoration of these habitats and the ecosystem services they provide. The course will use readings, videos, discussion, and classroom and field exercises to facilitate student learning. Field-based exercises will be conducted at sites along Red Butte Creek with contrasting land uses and at a local restoration site. Prerequisites: 'C-' or better in ENVST 2050 OR GEOG 1000 OR AP Environmental Science score of 3+
  • 3.00 Credits

    Questions surrounding food ' whether we produce enough of it for growing populations; eat the right kind of it for our health, culture, or environment; and around inequality in access and outcomes ' are important subjects of contemporary concern, from within the United States to the Global South and everywhere in between. Production, distribution, and consumption of food are among the earliest and most central ways humans relate to their environment. Food thus serves as a key lens for thinking through human-environment relations, our history, and the challenges of the future. This class explores how the increasingly global food system came to be, its social and environmental implications for different peoples and places, and how it might change ' and be changed. We will deploy a historical, geographical, and critical approach ' drawing on an interdisciplinary array of scholarship from the social sciences, as well as insights from the physical sciences, humanities, journalistic, and popular treatments ' to better understand our present moment. A geographical approach to food begins with the proposition that human-environment interactions are not uniform, preordained, or readily predictable. Rather, how food and other natural resources are produced, distributed, valued, consumed, conserved, and degraded are historically- and geographically-specific questions. Nonetheless, there are patterns that can be identified, discernable processes that have produced those patterns, and theories through which we might better understand and intervene around those processes.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Graduate students should enroll in GEOG 5368 or GEO 5368 and will be held to higher standards and/or more work. This class provides an introduction to critical energy issues facing our planet, with a focus on controversial topics and issues in Utah. These may include: hydraulic fracturing (fracking), offshore oil and gas development, oil shale and tar sand development, nuclear energy, renewable energy technologies such as wind and geothermal, the smart grid, difficulties in commercializing new energy technologies, air pollution, transportation choices, energy policy development, and global issues including population dynamics, climate change, carbon management, water resources, the Law of Unintended Consequences, and tipping points. A number of outstanding guest lecturers will provide expertise in their respective fields.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course will provide training in the physical, chemical, and biological factors that sustain streams and riparian areas. Social, Political and economic factors will be considered in the context of conservation and restoration of these habitats and the ecosystem services they provide. The course will use readings, videos, discussion, and classroom and field exercises to facilitate student learning. Field-based exercises will be conducted at sites along Red Butte Creek with contrasting land uses and at a local restoration site.
  • 3.00 Credits

    In this three-week intensive course, high school students will earn 3 college credits from the University of Utah in a community and university garden-based classes. Students will learn the skills of urban agriculture including food cultivation and preparation with instructors from a variety of backgrounds. The course will take place primarily at the CLC Garden and the University of Utah Edible Campus Gardens. Transportation will be provided from the CLC. Class will meet from 9am - 1pm Mondays through Thursdays and lunch will be provided. This program is being offered through a partnership between the Glendale CLC, The University of Utah, University Neighborhood Partners, and Hartland Community 4 Youth & Families.