Foundations of Environmental and Natural Resource Economics
Course Level Postgraduate
Course Level Postgraduate
                                                        Area/Catalogue
                                                        
BUSS 5360
                                                    
                                                        Course Level
                                                        
Postgraduate
                                                    
                                                        Offered Externally
                                                        
Yes
                                                    
Note: This offering may or may not be scheduled in every study period. Please refer to the timetable for further details.
Course ID
101649
                                                        Unit Value
                                                        
4.5
                                                    
                                                        University-wide elective course
                                                        
No
                                                    
                                                        Course owner
                                                        
International Graduate School Of Business
                                                    
This course provides a rigorous introduction to the fundamental concepts and current theoretical and empirical work in environmental and natural resource economics, the basic disciplinary framework within which modern sustainable business is understood and practised.
This course provides an introduction to the foundational concepts of environmental and natural resource economics, which is the disciplinary foundation for sustainable business. It presents the basic principles of welfare economics, on which these disciplines are based, within economics and in its application to the environment; the physical and economic impact of a business enterprise on the environment, analysed in terms of pollution, through the different categories of pollutants, the way in which pollution targets are set, and the economic instruments, such as permits or trading, that can be used to attain them; cost-benefit analysis, a central tool of economic analysis in both the private and public sector, with a critical examination of debates on social discounting, and on the limitations of and alternatives to CBA; the theory and practice of valuing the natural environment, particularly the categories of value, and the empirical methods used to assign monetary value; the economics of natural resource extraction, and its direct link to sustainability; and the nature and dynamics of renewable resources, with examples of open-access and private-property models in fisheries and forests, the distinction between economic and social efficiency, and the determination of resource use limits.
Wills, I 2006, Economics and the environment: a signalling and incentives approach, 2nd edn, Allen & Unwin, Crows Nest, NSW
Nil
Nil
| Component | Duration | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| INTERNAL, CITY WEST | |||
| Seminar | 3 hours x 11 weeks | ||
| EXTERNAL, CITY WEST, ONLINE | |||
| External (Asynchronous Online Discussion) | 3 hours equiv. x 11 weeks | ||
Note: These components may or may not be scheduled in every study period. Please refer to the timetable for further details.
Group project, Group project: written paper and class presentation, Individual written project, Individual Written project, Online responses posted to selected questions, Responses in class small group
                EFTSL*: 0.125
                Commonwealth Supported program (Band 3)
                To determine the fee for this course as part of a Commonwealth Supported program, go to:
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Fee-paying program for domestic and international students
International students and students undertaking this course as part of a postgraduate fee paying program must refer to the relevant program home page to determine the cost for undertaking this course.
Non-award enrolment
Non-award tuition fees are set by the university. To determine the cost of this course, go to:
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Not all courses are available on all of the above bases, and students must check to ensure that they are permitted to enrol in a particular course.
* Equivalent Full Time Study Load. Please note: all EFTSL values are published and calculated at ten decimal places. Values are displayed to three decimal places for ease of interpretation.
 
                                            
                                        