Course Schedule - Spring Semester 2005

     

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UNIV 113 001 (CRN: 22651)

TECH DISASTERS & CASTASTROPHES

Long Title:
Department: University Courses
Instructors:
Brito, Dagobert L.
Curl, Robert F.
Meeting: 2:30PM - 3:45PM TR (12-JAN-2005 - 29-APR-2005) 
Part of Term: Full Term
Grade Mode: Standard Letter
Course Type: Lecture
Method of Instruction: Face to Face
Credit Hours: 3
Course Syllabus:
 
Section Max Enrollment: 22
Section Enrolled: 7
Enrollment data as of: 15-MAY-2024 7:06PM
 
Additional Fees: None
 
Final Exam: Final Exam Unknown
 
Description: TECHNOLOGICAL DISASTERS AND CATASTROPHES ***** This spring semester seminar is open to all majors and is taught by Dagobert Brito of Economics and Robert Curl of Chemistry. Through the technology produced by the scientific revolution, we now control forces of previously unimaginable power in a world of instant communications and vast complexity. But how well do we control these enormously powerful forces? We all know that sometimes things go wrong with disastrous consequences. How does this happen and what can be done to prevent catastrophes? The course will utilize a case study approach. We will study such disasters as the Columbia space shuttle, Exxon Valdez, Bhopal, Chernobyl, Three Mile Island, the AIDS epidemic, and the collapse of Enron in order to develop general ideas about the causes and control of disasters and society's reaction to them. As a seminar course, class periods will be used primarily for discussion. We intend very few lectures, but there will be videos and occasional brief presentations by outside experts. ***** Course offered Spring 2005. ***** Instructor(s): Curl, Brito.