autumn 2023
SVF-3209 Climate change and resilient societies - 10 ECTS

Type of course

May be taken as a singular course.

Admission requirements

The eligible student must hold a bachelor’s degree from a relevant field of study. Prior knowledge of societal security, risk management, safety management, international relations, crisis management and emergency preparedness are recommended but not required.

Application code: 9371


Course content

This course provides knowledge about climate change as a societal threat and how societies can adapt. Built around the concept of resilient societies, this course centers on the role of natural hazards management, critical infrastructure and the link between mitigation and adaptation in the context of a changing climate. Taking a global perspective, the course aligns with the 2015 Paris Agreement and its focus on loss and damage in the context of climate change, including critical perspectives on climate change adaptation projects.

Objectives of the course

Knowledge:

The student ...

  • shall understand the science of climate change at a basic level.
  • account for overlaps and differences between disaster risk reduction (DRR) and CCA
  • contextualize the work of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC)
  • contrast central principles of CCA
  • understand the connection between local, national, regional and global-level CCA
  • appreciate how climate change interferes with natural hazard risks
  • understand CCA funding frameworks

Skills:

The student ...

  • shall be able to apply central theories of CCA to a concrete case
  • discuss the relationship between DRR and CCA
  • critically reflect on the nature and politics of CCA funding
  • account for the way that climate change may affect the dynamics of key natural hazards
  • reflect on the way that climate change may shape societal vulnerabilities
  • reflect on the ways in which actors at different levels engage in CCA work

General competence:

The student ...

  • shall understand the fundamentals of climate change science
  • write up a case report applying aspects of CCA work to a particular case
  • contextualize CCA work across levels
  • place CCA funding and global frameworks within a wider geopolitical context

Language of instruction and examination

English, but student can answer the exam in any Scandinavian language.

Teaching methods

The coursework includes module-based learning which will be given online.

Video lectures, written handouts, live and recorded guest lectures, project work, training-through-research, supervisions, digital workshops, a total of 28 hours of instruction.

Teaching is organized into three modules:

Module 1: Science and politics of climate change

Module 2: Conceptual issues in climate change adaptation

Module 3: Building resilient societies

Coursework requires active engagement with lecture and reading material as well as group-based project work.


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More info about the coursework requirements

There will be a mandatory work requirement for each of the three teaching modules.

Coursework 1: Individual online test (module 1)

Coursework 2: Individual written paper (module 2)

Coursework 3: Individual video report (module 3)

Assessment scale: Approved / Not approved.

The mandatory requirements are valid for three years.


More info about the assignment

There will be an exam for each of the three teaching modules:

Exam 1: Individual written assignment (module 1)

Exam 2: Individual written assignment (module 2)

Exam 3: Written assignment, individual or in groups of maximum four students (module 3)


Re-sit examination

Re-sit exam is granted to the students who have failed the last ordinary arranged exam. Re-sit is granted only for the failed part of the examination.
  • About the course
  • Campus: Tromsø |
  • ECTS: 10
  • Course code: SVF-3209
  • Earlier years and semesters for this topic