2023-2024 / GEOG2054-1

The Sustainability of Rural Systems

Duration

15h Th, 15h Pr

Number of credits

 Master in geography, global change (120 ECTS)4 crédits 

Lecturer

Serge Schmitz

Language(s) of instruction

English language

Organisation and examination

Teaching in the second semester

Schedule

Schedule online

Units courses prerequisite and corequisite

Prerequisite or corequisite units are presented within each program

Learning unit contents

The course aims to apprehend the systemic analysis of rural societies and areas' challenges in the twenty-first century. By analyzing rural systems worldwide, it seeks to develop a multisectoral and multiscalar approach to comprehending a situation. It pays attention to the multiple causes of a problematic situation and analyzes the impacts, actors' roles and strategies, and conflicts of societal values.

It allows students to use and develop tools such as problem and solution trees, sagittal diagrams, combinatorial prospective analysis, sociograms, choreomatic analysis, etc.

This year, the dairy industry (New Zealand), artisanal gold mines (Philippines), the choice to migrate (Senegal), women's cooperatives (Morocco), and tourism development (Cameroon, Belgium) will be discussed.luoo

Learning outcomes of the learning unit

Understand the complexity of rural development issues in a world in transition,

Produce multiscalar and multi-sector analyses,

Apprehend and develop tools for analyzing space systems,

Develop a double hermeneutic position.

Prerequisite knowledge and skills

English

Planned learning activities and teaching methods

Scientific articles reading, multimedia analysis, discussions, and teamwork.

Mode of delivery (face to face, distance learning, hybrid learning)

Blended learning


Additional information:

Face-to-face and preparation at home

Recommended or required readings

Journal papers and book chapters portfolio

Exam(s) in session

Any session

- In-person

oral exam

Continuous assessment


Additional information:

Scientific production during the year (60%) Oral exam (40%)
 

EXCELLENT: exceptional results going beyond the material covered in class

VERY GOOD: results above average, despite some weaknesses.

GOOD: generally good work, despite a number of weaknesses.

SATISFACTORY: honest work, but with significant gaps.

SUFFICIENT: The result meets the minimum criteria.

Work placement(s)

Organisational remarks and main changes to the course

Contacts

Prof. Serge Schmitz

S.Schmitz@uliege.be

04/3665629

Association of one or more MOOCs