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  Undergraduate Calendar 2015-2016
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2015-2016 Undergraduate Calendar
HOME Courses Environment and Urban Sustainability (EUS)

Environment and Urban Sustainability (EUS)
EUS 102 Environment and Sustainability
This course provides an introduction to the social, economic and environmental dimensions of sustainability in cities, particularly establishing the theoretical bases and understanding of the broad range of environmental problems that result when consumptive economies exploit their physical resources.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 202 Sustaining the City's Environments
This course provides insights into the promotion of geographically-balanced settlement structures, sustainable waste and water management systems, the efficient management of urban pollution, and effective and environmentally-sound transportation systems. These have been identified as being essential to sustaining the city's environment. Students will develop an environmental report card as their major project and will have the opportunity to see firsthand working urban systems of sustainability.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 301 Reading Neighbourhood Environments
This course acquaints students with the complex set of historical and contemporary factors that continue to influence Toronto's development as a city of neighbourhoods. The significance of Toronto's local environments will be examined within the context of Toronto as a healthy and culturally diverse city and students will have the opportunity to develop their own appreciation for the importance of these factors by analyzing or reading the environments of selected Toronto locales in fieldwork projects.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 401 Patterns of Demography and Environment
This course outlines the theoretical basis of demography and explores the demographic variables that reflect the past, present, and future of our society. Lectures and labs expand on the complexities of the seemingly simple expressions of birth, death and migration in Canada. Spreadsheet analysis is the basis for exploration of population comparisons, change and prediction within plant, animal, and human populations. The possible impacts of these predicted population changes on Canadian society will be covered in the concluding lectures.
Lect: 2 hrs./Lab: 1 hr.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 402 Research and Statistics
This course is an introduction to statistical methods for student in Environment and Urban Sustainability. It complements the student's knowledge of basic analytical approaches used in research learned in SSH 301 (Research Design and Qualitative Methods). Descriptive statistics, sampling distributions, hypothesis testing, and statistical tests give the student the practical methods needed to statistically describe and analyze environmental phenomena and to present those results.
Lect: 3 hrs.
Prerequisite: EUS 102
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 450 Responses to Climate Change
This course explores the concepts of climate change, environmental sustainability, and sustainable development from an interdisciplinary perspective. It places emphasis on mitigation and adaptation strategies and deals explicitly with their interactions in response to climate change. The focus is on urban areas and their potential for mitigation of impacts through strategies that reduce greenhouse emissions and as locus for adaptation to global change.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 501 Ecological Processes in the Cdn Landscape
The goal of this program course is to give students a firm grasp of the concepts of ecosystem processes and patterns occurring at a landscape scale, and of how these concepts can be applied to enhance the effectiveness of environmental policy, assessment and management. The course will explore the principles that are foundational to the understanding of landscape ecology using examples from Canadian ecosystems. Students will develop an understanding and appreciation for: characteristic spatial and temporal scales of ecological events; physical and biological agents of pattern; the concept of disturbance and landscape equilibrium; the applications of landscape ecology to monitoring and conservation; and, an appreciation for how individual organisms and human activity influence ecological processes.
Lect: 3 hrs.
Prerequisite: ENH 617 or BLG 143
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 550 Sustainable Cities: A Review
This course critically examines the concept of sustainability in relations to cities in Canada and around the world. It investigates the extent to which the notion of sustainability translates or carries across cities and regions, and considers how cities in Canada are achieving various components of urban sustainability in comparison to cities around the world. The course will also critically examine how demographic change, poverty and wealth influence the sustainability of cities and the types of strategies cities adopt to address these issues.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 601 Nature in Fragments
This course will be devoted to hands-on discussion and demonstration of major topics related to understanding sprawl and its impacts on the natural environment. It will begin by exploring the political, economic, social, and demographic forces impacting development patterns in metropolitan areas across North America, with specific examples drawn from southern Ontario. With this as background, the course will transition to an investigation of the impact of sprawl on ecological functions and attempt to better understand how science and policy may interface to guide development patterns in a more ecologically sustainable way.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 650 Waste and Waste Management
This course introduces the student to the world of waste management by developing a solid background in the categories of waste, and the political and economic, as well as environmental, rationales behind the adoption and promotion of international and Canadian waste management systems. The students will have an opportunity to develop waste audits as well as experience firsthand waste management systems in action.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 701 Field Studies in Urban Ecology
This is a senior level program course designed specifically for Environment and Urban Sustainability students. It seeks to unite theory and application acquired in foundational years by providing students the opportunity to conceive of and study a relevant scientific question within the field of urban ecology. Specifically, the goal of this course is to provide fourth year students with a real world opportunity to design and conduct their own urban ecology research project.
Lect: 2 hrs./Lab: 1 hr.
Prerequisite: EUS 501
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 750 Sustainable Trans and Energy Strategies
This course looks at issues associated with transportation and energy planning through the lens of sustainable development with a focus on urban areas. The main objectives of the course are to recognize the importance of transportation- and energy-related environmental problems, particularly in the local context, and to explore how transportation and energy use may be made more sustainable.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 760 Cities at Risk
Urban places are susceptible to a wide spectrum of threats from natural and biological hazards and from a wide assortment of human activities. This course addresses the need to understand the scope of potential threats to appreciate the mechanisms that activate them, and to formulate responses that mitigate, if not eliminate, the damage they cause.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 801 Senior Projects in EUS
The principal goal of this course is to help provide synthesis and maturity of perspective for the appropriate on-the-job application of the wide range of theory, models, methods, skills and approaches to which fourth year students have been exposed. The course places students in a consulting project which stresses the importance of organization, cooperation, teamwork, efficient research and report writing. Students will work as a group of "consultants" who jointly undertake secondary and primary environmental policy research and report preparation on behalf of a "client" in a non-academic context.
Lect: 2 hrs./Lab: 1 hr.
Prerequisite: EUS 501
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 850 Sustainability in Organizations
The course is designed as an introduction to and evaluation of the planning and implementation of environmental management and sustainability in business firms, local governments and organizations, and provincial and federal agencies. The course examines the role and responsibilities of the environmental manager, covering the principal objectives, components and planning of an effective environmental management system (EMS), which is an integral part of an organization's management structure.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 860 Measuring Sustainability
The main objective of this course is to investigate the basic tools of sustainable development by understanding the possibilities, constraints and interactions of methods for measuring and monitoring sustainability. Students will gain familiarity with the application of a variety of tools and methodologies such as State of Environment Reporting, Best Practice Assessment, Urban Metabolism Analysis, and Environmental Costing.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 870 Ecological Restoration
This program course will focus on the ecological issues associated with restoration of degraded habitats. It will concentrate on the application of ecological theory to restoration practice and the use of restoration as a test of our knowledge concerning how natural systems function. The course will include discussion of restoration in a variety of habitat types, with special attention devoted to those present in the Greater Toronto Area (GTA). Students will become familiar with historical and contemporary approaches to restoring diversity and function to disturbed ecosystems. Restoration concepts will be enhanced and reinforced through an opportunity critique a professional restoration plan.
Lect: 3 hrs.
GPA Weight: 1.00
Billing Units: 1
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EUS 900 EUS Internship Placement I
An optional placement based on a minimum of 10 weeks of full-time employment is available allowing students to experience career-related work terms that enhance their university learning experience. Enrollment is limited with admission based on the student's grade point average. The work term is normally in the summer period between a student's second and third years. Departmental consent required. This is a non-credit course.
Lect: 1 hr.
Departmental consent required
GPA Weight: 0.00
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EUS 901 EUS Internship Placement II
An optional placement based on a minimum of 10 weeks of full-time employment is available allowing students to experience career-related work terms that enhance their university learning experience. Enrolment is limited with admission based on the student's grade point average. The work term is normally in the summer period between a student's third and fourth years. Departmental consent required. This is a non-credit course.
Lect: 1 hr.
Departmental consent required
GPA Weight: 0.00
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