Fall 2024 International Affairs U6827 section R03

Methods for Sustainable Development Prac

Methods for Development Pract

Call Number 16257
Day & Time
Location
F 9:00am-10:30am
324 International Affairs Building
Day & Time
Location
F 11:00am-12:30pm
409 International Affairs Building
Points 0
Grading Mode Ungraded
Approvals Required None
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

Open to EPD Concentration Only. Prerequisite: Course Application. This course is the first part of a two-course sequence for advanced students concentrating in Economic and Political Development. The second part is the Workshop in Sustainable Development Practice (SIPA U9001). These courses are integrated into a year-long encounter with the actual practice of sustainable development, guided by the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the Sustainable Development Goals. The course seeks to help students develop a conceptual and critical understanding of some of the key tools and approaches employed by organizations in sustainable development practice, and to skill students in using these approaches and tools in a discerning, ethical and effective manner that recognizes their shortcomings and limitations. The course takes a hands-on approach and promotes learning by doing. Questions of Whose development? Whose priorities and agenda? Whose proposed solutions and strategies? are ever present in choosing development approaches and outcomes. Development work, to the extent it involves development organizations and workers entering as external agents of change into a national arena or local community, is an intensely political exercise. What has changed in the course of sustainable development practice is that development workers increasingly perceive themselves less as direct agents of change - delivering top-down transfers of knowledge and resources from those who know best or have more, to those in need or who need to be influenced - and more as facilitators of change. According to this approach, the development worker seeks to act as a medium and partner in identifying local needs and priorities, and helping to translate these into equitable and sustainable development outcomes through knowledge-sharing, empowerment, capacity building and/or additional resources. However, this transition has been uneven, and externally-driven, top-down approaches persist. Development workers also need to be continually aware of the values, assumptions and biases that they bring to their interactions with local actors and that are implicit in the approaches and tools that they use. With needs, priorities and agendas contested across many levels and sets of interests, the job of a development worker is a complex and responsible one. To that end, this course also challenges students to reflect on their goals and desired approaches in their future roles as development agents. Registration in this cours

Web Site Vergil
Department International and Public Affairs
Enrollment 0 students as of 2:07PM Monday, September 16, 2024
Subject International Affairs
Number U6827
Section R03
Division School of International and Public Affairs
Open To SIPA
Note Recitation
Section key 20243INAF6827UR03