Arts Humanities Social Science Natural Resources Sciences and Professional Studies

Faculty

  • Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Faculty
  • Hussein Amery
  • Linda Battalora
  • Elizabeth Davis
  • Tina Gianquitto
  • Kathleen Hancock
  • Derrick Hudson
  • Adrianne Kroepsch
  • Jon Leydens
  • Shannon Mancus
  • Kenneth Osgood
  • Nicole Smith
  • Jay Straker
  • Qin Zhu

Website Dr. Amery specializes in water politics and policy in the Center East and North Africa, with a focus on threats to water and nutrient security in the Arab World. Graduate courses:Global Water Politics & Policy, International Development (Middle Eastward)

Website Dr. Battalora is an agile fellow member of the Club of Petroleum Engineers (SPE) Health, Safety, Security, Surroundings and Social Responsibility (HSSE-SR) Advisory Commission and the Sustainable Development Technical Department Steering Committee. Graduate courses:Ecology Law &  Sustainability

Elizabeth Van Wie Davis Website
Dr. Davis—who has lived and worked in Asia for many years—initially focused her academic research on Chinese energy policy and the surround, though it has expanded to other parts of Asia, including field work and publications on Thailand, Indonesia, Japan, and Korea. Graduate courses:Free energy & Security Policy, International Development (Asia)

Tina Gianquitto Website
Dr. Gianquitto is interested in examining the intellectual and aesthetic experience of nature for women in nineteenth-century America and investigating the linguistic, perceptual, and scientific systems that were bachelor to women to depict those experiences.
Graduate courses: Available for independent studies.

Kathleen Hancock Website Dr. Hancock specializes in politics of renewable energy, African free energy, and Russia and Eurasia. Graduate courses: Natural Resources & Energy Policy: Theories and Practice, Political Risk Assessment, Energy Politics

Derrick Hudson Website
Dr. Hudson specializes in African natural resource and development, renewable free energy strategies in Africa, and social justice problems and evolution in Africa.

Graduate courses: International Development (Africa)

Adrianne Kroepsch Website
Dr. Kroepsch studies environmental governance in the American Westward and has active inquiry projects on water, anarchistic oil and gas, and wildfire.
Graduate courses: U.S. Water Politics & Policy, Environmental Advice

Jon Leydens Website
Dr. Leydens  specializes in engineering education enquiry that looks at how stakeholders leverage advice and social justice to transform and challenge educational practices and the applied science profession.
Graduate courses: Available for independent studies.

Shannon Mancus Dr. Mancus'southward expertise revolves around environmental communication and the performance of environmentalist identities in pop civilization.
Graduate courses: Environmental Advice

Ken Osgood Website
Dr. Osgood specializes in U.S. political and diplomatic history, as well as the history of intelligence and propaganda.
Graduate courses: Available for independent studies.

Website
Dr. Smith specializes in artisanal and small-calibration mining, sustainable development and free energy and extractive industries, corporate social responsibility, and engineering education.

Graduate courses: Energy, Natural Resources & Society

Jay Straker Website
Dr. Straker specializes in changing experiences and representations of youth in W Africa.
Graduate courses: Bachelor for independent studies.

Qin Zhu Website
Dr. Zhu is interested in environmental ideals, energy policy and politics in People's republic of china, and the cultural foundations of energy behavior.

Graduate courses: Available for contained studies.

Cadre Courses

Students take six core courses worth 18 credit-hours. Five are taught with a focus on social scientific discipline, humanities, and legal frameworks; the 6th is a quantitative course you can select from amidst several taught on campus. For the quantitative class, with the plan director'southward prior blessing, students may request to take an online course or 1 from some other campus that is equivalent to i of those offered at Mines.

For descriptions of core and elective courses, see the graduate catalog: https://catalog.mines.edu/graduate/programs/HASS/

Natural Resources & Energy Policy: Theories and Exercise (HASS 593) – Fall

This form introduces students to the policy-making process, drawing on a variety of theoretical approaches, geographic locations (within the US and in other countries), and resources and energy bug. Coordinated by the NREP Graduate Director, speakers will be from HASS, Economics and Business, Petroleum Engineering science, Mining, and other departments with policy expertise, as well every bit from others who influence and create public and private policy. In the 2nd half of the class, students will conduct original research projects that focus on natural resource and energy, applying theoretical frameworks they take learned from the speakers.

Environmental Law & Sustainability (PEGN 530) – Fall

In this class, students will be introduced to the cardinal legal principles that are relevant to sustainable engineering science project evolution. General principles of United States (U.South.) ecology regulation pertaining to air quality, h2o quality, waste management, hazardous substances remediation, regulation of chemical manufacture and distribution, natural resources, and energy will be discussed in parallel with international treaties, and conventions pertaining to environmental protection and human rights. In the context of engineering projection pattern, students will explore legal, societal, and ethical risks, and risk mitigation methodologies.

Energy, Natural Resources & Society (MNGN 571) – Spring

This is a graduate form that applies a social science lens to understanding the intersections between free energy and mineral developments and communities. In this grade, nosotros volition examine these intersections through a case written report arroyo that includes directed readings, such as ethnographies and peer-reviewed periodical articles, and that incorporates student-led discussions and research projects. By exploring diverse evolution initiatives, such as oil and gas, mining, wind, solar, nuclear, hydropower, and geothermal, students will gain a comprehensive understanding of the free energy-mineral-guild nexus and the function communities play in both furthering and limiting these developments.

POLITICAL RISK Cess (HASS 550) – Bound

Uses social scientific discipline belittling tools and readings as well equally indices prepared by organizations, such as the World Depository financial institution and the International Budgetary Fund, to create assessments of the political, social, economical, environmental and security risks that multinational corporations may face up as they expand operations around the world. Students volition develop detailed political risk reports for specific countries that teams collectively select. Prerequisite: LAIS 545 and IPE Minor. 3 hours seminar; iii semester hours.

1 additional HASS course.

Run into options in the Electives list.

Quantitative Methods

Options include:

  • Life Wheel Assessment (CEEN 501)
  • Econometrics I (EBGN590)
  • Geological Data Assay (GEGN532)
  • Applications of Geographical Information Systems (GEGN575)
  • Introduction To Statistical Methods (MATH530)
  • Mine Risk Management (MNGN565)

Electives

Students take at least 4 elective courses worth 12 credit-hours, assuasive them to focus on the areas of greatest involvement. Courses are offered in the Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences (HASS) department as well equally in economics, engineering, and scientific discipline. At least 2 courses must be from the HASS department. Upwardly to two classes may be at the 400-level. Be sure to check with the relevant professor on per-requisites for courses outside of the HASS department.

Electives past Focus Areas

Students may opt to have courses within a focus expanse in order to demonstrate a particular expertise. Alternatively, students may select across the focus areas to demonstrate breadth. Other Mines graduate programs may offer a pocket-sized in their area. Consult with the relevant program to learn what courses they require for a minor.

Free energy, Water, and the Environment
  • CEEN 573 Reclamation of Disturbed Lands
  • CEEN 574 Solid Waste Minimization and Recycling
  • CEEN 575 Gamble Waste Site Remediation
  • CEEN 576 Pollution Prevention: Fundamentals and Exercise
  • CEEN 501 Life Bike Analysis (Online)
  • CEEN 591 Environmental Projection Direction
  • CEEN 593 Environmental Permitting and Regulatory Compliance
  • EBGN 537 Water Economics
  • EBGN 570 Environmental Economic science
  • GEGN 466 Groundwater Technology
  • GEGN 585 Fluid Mechanics for Hydrology
  • HASS 498B Sustainability, Extraction, and Governance
  • HASS 521 Environmental Philosophy
  • HASS 525 Ecology Advice
  • HASS 565 Scientific discipline, Technology & Order
  • HASS 568 Environmental Justice
  • HASS 584 U.S. Water Politics & Policy
  • HASS 587 Environmental Politics and Policy
  • HASS 588 Global Water Politics & Policy
  • HASS 591 Energy Politics
  • HASS 592 Energy and Security Policy
  • HASS 598D Energy Equity
International Development and Global Issues
  • HASS 535 International Development: May exist taken up to three times for dissimilar regions (Asia, Africa, Latin America, Middle East, Eurasia)
  • HASS 541 African Development
  • HASS 558 Natural Resources and Development
  • HASS 591 Energy Politics
  • HASS 592 Energy and Security Policy
Mining
  • CEEN 556 Mining and the Surround
  • EBGN 521 Microeconomics of Mineral and Free energy Markets
  • EBGN 535  Economics of Metal Industries and Markets
  • GEOL 514 Business of Economical Geology
  • GEGN 532 Geological Information Analysis
  • MNGN 501 Regulatory Mining Laws and Contracts
  • MNGN 503 Mining Technology for Sustainable Development
  • MNGN 510 Fundamentals of Mining and Mineral Resource Development
  • MNGN 540 Clean Coal Technology
  • MNGN 562 Mining Environmental and Social Responsibility
  • MNGN 565 Mine Risk Management
Business organization, Economics, and Energy Analytics
  •  IEBGN 509 Mathematical Economics
  • EBGN 510 Natural Resource Economics
  • EBGN 521 Microeconomics of Mineral and Free energy Markets
  • EBGN 530 Economics of International Energy Markets
  • EBGN 535  Economics of Metallic Industries and Market
  • EBGN 537 Water Economics
  • EBGN 570 Ecology Economics
  • EBGN 590 Econometrics I
  • EBGN 594 Time-Series Econometrics
  • EBGN 632 Primary Fuels
  • GEOL 514 Business of Economic Geology
  • MATH 530 Introduction to Statistical Methods
  • Courses approved for Quantitative Methods may also be taken every bit electives
Science and Risk Communication
  • HASS 415 Mass Media Studies
  • HASS 416 Picture show Studies
  • HASS 425 Intercultural Communication
  • HASS 427/598 Risk Communication
  • HASS 523 Advanced Science Communication
  • HASS 525 Environmental Communication
  • HASS 30 Environmental Pic
Professional Development

Note: i credit hour

  • LICM 501 Professional Voice communication
  • SYGN 501 Inquiry Skills for Graduate Students
  • SYGN 502 Introduction to Enquiry Ethics
  • SYGN 503 Tools for Success: Integrating into the Mines Community

Graduate Minor

A 12 credit-hour small-scale for graduate students pursuing degrees in other Mines academic units. Please contact either a HASS faculty fellow member with whom you are interested in working or the managing director of the HASS graduate program. The Graduate Pocket-size must be approved by the student'due south graduate committee and past the HASS department.

Document in Natural Resources & Energy Policy

Designed to exist completed in a single semester, or over two semesters for office-time students, the Document in Natural Resources & Free energy Policy (NREP) is a 9 credit-hr program affiliated with the MS in NREP.  To earn the certificate, students must have two of the 5 required courses for the Main's program plus an elective to be canonical by the NREP Director.

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Source: https://hass.mines.edu/natural-resources-energy-policy/

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