• About
    • This Site & ENVS
    • ENVS Site Navigation
  • Communications
    • Communications Archives
      • ENVS Announcements Archive
      • ENVS Alum Email Archive
      • ENVX Newsletter Archive
    • Contact ENVS/DS SAAB Tutors
    • Instagram Feed
    • Make an Appointment
    • Nominate Your Post/Project/Site
    • Opportunities Posts
    • Poster Design
    • Share/Read/Display DS Site Post RSS Feeds
  • Major/Minor Info
    • The ENVS Major & Minor
    • ENVS Core Courses
    • ENVS 244/295/499
    • Future Courses
    • Your Student Record
    • Your Concentration
    • Your Projects
    • Your Senior Capstone
    • Related PSU/PCC Courses
  • Course Resources
    • Doing Situated Research
      • Situated Research Details
    • ENVS Course & Project Portfolio Templates
      • Course Portfolio Template
      • Project Portfolio Template
    • ENVS Records: Scoring Rubrics
    • Interdisciplinarity and Concept Mapping
    • Mapping Actors & Processes
    • Models of Environmental Communication
    • New York Times Environment Articles
    • Resources for ENVS Topics
      • ENVS Topics Glossary
    • Share Spatial Data
    • Style Reminders for ENVS Students
    • Styling Citations via Chicago Author-Date
  • Databases
    • About Student Databases
    • ENVS Students
    • ENVS Concentrations
    • Senior Capstones
    • Student Projects
    • Map of All Projects
  • Other Sites
    • ENVS LC Site ➤
      • Events
      • News
      • Symposium
    • Bridges (ENVS 295)
    • DS Multisite Home ➤
      • DS Help Site
      • DS Training Site
    • EcoTypes Site
    • Environmental Action LLC Site
    • ENVS 160 SP18 (Login Only)
    • ENVS Facebook Page
    • ENVX Site
    • Overseas Site

ENVS Program

Lewis & Clark Environmental Studies

July 11, 2014 3:11 pm

Sample Concentration

Student: Laurel Garrett
Graduation date: May 2016
Type: Concentration (single major)
Date approved: August 2014

Go to concentration landing page


Summary

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Sed posuere massa “…in ante euismod ultrices” (Beck 2010, 255). Nunc imperdiet fermentum quam non vehicula (Castree 2004; Heise 2008). Nulla volutpat mauris orci, a faucibus nisi volutpat nec. Phasellus ac fermentum massa. Pellentesque sagittis tortor leo. Morbi quis est justo (Masset 1991, 2002). Vivamus sed mauris placerat, interdum turpis id, malesuada dolor. Duis sit amet justo id nisl aliquet varius vitae vitae purus. Nam leo nibh, molestie eget enim quis, ullamcorper imperdiet neque. Proin non odio tincidunt, aliquam urna id, mollis lacus.

Aliquam ut vehicula sem. Etiam non sapien at diam elementum congue. Aliquam sit amet faucibus turpis. Vivamus fermentum leo ac lectus pretium, ut ultricies magna adipiscing. Praesent feugiat risus sit amet faucibus aliquet. Maecenas vestibulum ullamcorper ante imperdiet tristique. Quisque porttitor ipsum odio, sed porttitor tortor tempus eget. In et pulvinar lorem. Nunc pharetra ante ut ipsum hendrerit tristique. Etiam luctus ipsum eget laoreet ultrices. Curabitur varius lacus eget purus congue, nec euismod lorem pretium. Ut aliquet urna lacus. Praesent sit amet libero dolor. Mauris interdum nibh eu ultricies sodales.

Suspendisse euismod sapien vitae mi auctor rhoncus (Proctor 2013). In eget neque fermentum, scelerisque mi ut, blandit magna (Robbins 2013). Morbi ac tortor sed tortor lacinia posuere sit amet ut urna (Wuerthner et al. 2014). Nunc vitae viverra enim. Nulla ut massa nec risus dignissim feugiat. Pellentesque posuere nunc nec dui fringilla cursus. Proin et sodales dui. Fusce et urna dui.

Morbi eu elit eu lacus tempus pulvinar ac luctus justo. Class aptent taciti sociosqu ad litora torquent per conubia nostra, per inceptos himenaeos. Pellentesque ut consectetur tortor. Curabitur auctor, diam elementum fermentum bibendum, enim lacus convallis velit, sit amet scelerisque nulla ipsum id felis. Aliquam erat volutpat. In dapibus venenatis lacus, id porttitor ante euismod et. Etiam mattis luctus feugiat.

Beck, U. 2010. “Climate for Change, or How to Create a Green Modernity?” Theory, Culture & Society 27 (2-3): 254–66. doi:10.1177/0263276409358729.
Castree, N. 2004. “Differential Geographies: Place, Indigenous Rights and ‘local’resources.” Political Geography 23 (2): 133–67.
Heise, Ursula K. 2008. Sense of Place and Sense of Planet: The Environmental Imagination of the Global. Oxford University Press.
Massey, Doreen. 1991. “A Global Sense of Place.” Marxism Today 35 (6): 24–29.
———. 2002. “Don’t Let’s Counterpose Place and Space.” Development 45 (1): 24–25.
Proctor, James D. 2013. “Saving Nature in the Anthropocene.” Journal of Environmental Studies and Sciences 3 (1): 83–92. doi:10.1007/s13412-013-0108-1.
Robbins, Paul. 2013. “Choosing Metaphors for the Anthropocene: Cultural and Political Ecologies.” In The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Cultural Geography, edited by Nuala C. Johnson, Richard H. Schein, and Jamie Winders, 305–19. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781118384466.ch27.
Wuerthner, George, Eileen Crist, and Tom Butler, eds. 2014. Keeping the Wild: Against the Domestication of Earth. Island Press.

 

Related

Questions

  • Descriptive: Aliquam ut vehicula sem? Etiam non sapien at diam elementum congue? Aliquam sit amet faucibus turpis?
  • Explanatory: Vivamus fermentum leo ac lectus pretium, ut ultricies magna adipiscing? Praesent feugiat risus sit amet faucibus aliquet? Maecenas vestibulum ullamcorper ante imperdiet tristique?
  • Evaluative: Quisque porttitor ipsum odio, sed porttitor tortor tempus eget? In et pulvinar lorem?
  • Instrumental: Curabitur varius lacus eget purus congue, nec euismod lorem pretium?

Related

Concentration courses

  • HIST 239 (Constructing the American Landscape, 4 credits), fall 2014. U.S. landscape history as exemplifying environmental practices over time.
  • ENVS 499 (Independent Study, 4 credits), spring 2015. Concentration-related research connected to anticipated East Africa overseas program fall 2015.
  • HIST 239 (Constructing the American Landscape, 4 credits), fall 2014. U.S. landscape history as exemplifying environmental practices over time.
  • ENVS 499 (Independent Study, 4 credits), spring 2015. Concentration-related research connected to anticipated East Africa overseas program fall 2015.

Arts and humanities courses

  • HIST 261 (Global Environmental History, 4 credits). Pre-approved A&H course; no justification required.
  • HIST 239 (Constructing the American Landscape, 4 credits). U.S. landscape history as exemplifying environmental practices over time.

Related

Digital Scholarship Multisite © 2018 · Lewis & Clark College · Environmental Studies Program · Log in

/* ----------------------------------------- */ /* Content Template: Concentration Full - start */ /* ----------------------------------------- */ /* ----------------------------------------- */ /* Content Template: Concentration Full - end */ /* ----------------------------------------- */