MIT OpenCourseWare
  • OCW home
  • Course List
  • about OCW
  • Help
  • Feedback
  • Support MIT OCW

Syllabus

Overview

Examines alternative conceptions and theoretical underpinnings of the notion of "sustainable development." Focuses on the sustainability problems of industrial countries (i.e., aging of populations, sustainable consumption, institutional adjustments, etc.); and of developing states and economies in transition (i.e., managing growth, sustainability of production patterns, pressures of population change, etc.). Explores the sociology of knowledge around sustainability, the economic and technological dimensions and institutional imperatives. Implications for political constitution of economic performance.

17.181 fulfills undergraduate public policy requirement in the major and minor. Graduate students are expected to explore the subject in greater depth through reading and individual research (17.182).


Required Books

Axelrod, Robert, and Michael D. Cohen. Harnessing Complexity. Basic Books, 2001.

Choucri, Nazli. Global Accord: Environmental Challenges and International Responses. Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press, 1995.

Becker, Egon and Thomas Jahn, eds. Sustainability and the Social Sciences: A Cross-Disciplinary Approach to Integrating Environmental Considerations into Theoretical Reorientation. London: Zed Books, 1999.

Stavins, Robert N. Economics of the Environment. 4th ed. New York: W. W. Norton and Company, 2000.

Tainter, Joseph A. The Collapse of Complex Societies. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988.


Web Site on Sustainable Development

Global System for Sustainable Development