BATE Professor Wayne Hayes,
Ph.D., May 30, 2000
| Syllabus | Schedule |
Bulletin Board |
TOC: Goals |
Resources | Organization |
Grading | Contacting the
Instructor
Welcome to the summer, 2000, offering of Business and the Environment, aka BATE or BMBA 65001. The course meets from 6:30 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. each Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday from May 30 until June 30, an intense five-week period. Your professor and facilitator is Wayne Hayes, Ph.D., Associate Professor of Planning.
Two main goals will guide this offering of Business and the Environment :
Along the way, these questions must be raised and discussed:
A companion BATE Web Site accompanies the course as a vital and dynamic resource, including the following:
Please purchase these books, available at the Ramapo Campus Store:
Supplementary readings are listed in the schedule and will be made available by the facilitator.
Part I: A historical glimpse of the formative effect of business institutions on the environment, including the effect on urbanization and early development. Readings excerpted and photocopied from:
Part II: Sustainable Development, global and macro perspective: The theme of sustainability has emerged as the theoretical and practical exploration of the merging of growth and environmental quality. Sustainable development is the major debate in the BATE field today. Our readings are:
Part III: Sustainability at the level of the industry and the firm is examined by Paul Hawken, Amory Lovins, and L. Hunter Lovins, in their new book, Natural Capitalism.
Part IV: Case studies. Lawrence Susskind of MIT offers a course for corporate executives on how to deal with environmental issues. With Patrick Field, he has turned this into a book, Dealing With an Angry Public, The Mutual Gains Approach to Resolving Disputes, published in 1996. Cases include Three Mile Island, Exxon Valdez spill, Hydro-Quebec, and othe