Fall 2024 Sustainability Management PS5470 section 001

CIRCULAR ECONOMY FOR SUSTAINABILITY PROF

CIRCULAR ECONOMY FOR SUST

Call Number 12049
Day & Time
Location
M 6:10pm-8:00pm
903 School of Social Work
Points 3
Grading Mode Standard
Approvals Required None
Instructor Danielle Azoulay
Type LECTURE
Method of Instruction In-Person
Course Description

Throughout history, societies have discovered resources, designed and developed them into textiles,

tools and structures, and bartered and exchanged these goods based on their respective values.

Economies emerged, driven by each society’s needs and limited by the resources and technology

available to them. Over the last two centuries, global development accelerated due in large part to the

overextraction and use of finite resources, whether for energy or materials, and supported by vast

technological advancements. However, this economic model did not account for the long-term impacts of

the disposal or depletion of these finite resources and instead, carried on unreservedly in a “take-make’-

waste” manner, otherwise known as a linear economy. Despite a more profound understanding of our

planet’s available resources, the environmental impact of disposal and depletion, and the technological

advancements of the last several decades, the economic heritage of the last two centuries persists today;

which begs the question: what alternatives are there to a linear economy?

The premise of this course is that through systems-thinking, interdisciplinary solutions for an alternative

economic future are available to us. By looking at resources’ potential, we can shape alternative methods

of procurement, design, application, and create new market demands that aim to keep materials,

products and components in rotation at their highest utility and value. This elective course will delve into

both the theory of a circular economy - which would be a state of complete systemic regeneration and

restoration as well as an optimized use of resources and zero waste - and the practical applications

required in order to achieve this economic model. Achieving perfect circularity represents potentially

transformative systemic change and requires a fundamental re-think of many of our current economic

structures, systems and processes.

This is a full-semester elective course which is designed to create awareness among sustainability

leaders that those structures, systems and processes which exist today are not those which will carry us

(as rapidly as we need) into a more sustaining future. The class will be comprised of a series of lectures,

supported by readings and case-studies on business models, design thinking and materi

Web Site Vergil
Department Sustainability Management
Enrollment 32 students (40 max) as of 12:05PM Monday, December 30, 2024
Subject Sustainability Management
Number PS5470
Section 001
Division School of Professional Studies
Note Graduate Students Only
Section key 20243SUMA5470K001