PhD course - The Economics of the EnvironmentStockholm Resilience Centre offers a PhD course in Environmental Economics, five credits. The course takes place between April and May 2008 in collaboration with Department of Economics, Stockholm University.Societies all over the world depend on natural resources for their survival. Not only do natural resources fulfill basic needs such as food, water and shelter, but they also produce goods and services such as medicine, air purification and recreation.
From a management perspective, natural resources are not only because of their inherent characteristics but also because of the institutional structures that control our use of them. It is therefore not surprising that some of the most serious challenges to the economy and to economists today are related to the environment, especially in the light of the on-going globalization and population growth.
The course will be problem-oriented and as such targeted to both PhD students interested in receiving a general overview of the subject environmental economics as well as to those who are interested in pursuing a research career in environmental economics, academically or professionally.
The aim of this course is to highlight some of the most prominent problems typically associated with natural resource management. We will choose an environmental problem on the current agenda, which could be local (for example eutrophication of lakes and seas, such as the Baltic Sea ) or global (such as climate change). Each lecture will then emphasize different aspects of this problem.
Teachers
The course is run by the Beijer Institute of Ecological Economics and will involve several of Beijer´s researchers; Anne-Sophie Crépin, Therese Lindahl and Ingela Ternström (main teachers) as well as Carl Folke and Aart de Zeeuw.
Guest Lecturers
Rob Hart (SLU), Tore Söderqvist (Enveco miljöekonomi)