Global Justice LSSC 1320
Our Global Justice course recognizes that the onset of globalization has coincided with the emergence of a variety of calls for "global justice," reform, and alternative forms of globalization. The desire for global justice and alternative globalizations emerges from economic, cultural, ecological, and political trends. Interdisciplinary in nature, this course combines perspectives from history, sociology, anthropology, political science, economics, philosophy, and civil society in order to explore the meanings of global justice and alternative globalization. Explore their central policy proposals, institutional structures, and the new forms of social experience that are producing the desire for greater transnational and international equality, and focus on how appeals for economic redistribution, cultural recognition, environmental sustainability, and political representation intersect.
Note(s)
This course is an upper-level Liberal Studies credit for degree programs. (Excluded programs include S442.)
Full Time Equivalent
Hours and Fees
Hours
Fee
Course Sections
- Contact Information
- Contact:
- Liberal Studies Department
- Email:
- celiberal@georgebrown.ca
- Phone:
- Office Location(s):
-
- St. James Campus, 193 King St. E., Building G (SJG), third floor
Read about our textbooks policy, and remember that the Continuing Education attendance policy and closure dates differ from those for full-time college programs.