This course uses the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to highlight the multi-faceted field of global health. The SDGs address everything from gender equality to clean water and sanitation to affordable, clean energy. In examining how health intersects with these goals, this course draws on the expertise of Pitt and CMU as well as health and sustainability practitioners. Students who complete the course will understand how climate and sustainability contribute to good health and well-being from an truly interdisciplinary perspective.
With each global health crisis, the interconnectedness of populations around the globe becomes more pronounced. Diseases not only affect the health of communities, but they have a profound impact on political, economic, and social stability within countries and regions. This course engages the interdisciplinary nature of global health by approaching the issue through the lens of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) developed by the United Nations. The SDGs range in focus from good health and well-being to gender equality to clean water and sanitation to affordable, clean energy. By engaging the ways that health has a stake in these goals, the course will bring the expertise of faculty from the University of Pittsburgh and CMU as well as practitioners to understand and address the issue surrounding global health from a myriad of perspectives and avenues. With an applied focus, the course will assist students in engaging and advocating for a community on a global health issue through a policy memo. This iteration of the course will examine climate change and SDGs #13 and 15.
1 Credit for PITT students and 3 Units for CMU students is provided for the completion of each iteration of the mini-course
Friday, November 6
Pre-Class Brainstorm: Prior to class, students should brainstorm various issues surrounding global health and climate change. Students should do a small amount of research on the communities affected by at least one of the issues they’ve brainstormed.
Pre-Reads: Prior to class, students should review the entire syllabus and its policies, the policy memo assignment and rubric, and all of the posted student policy memo examples.
Session 1 – 5:00PM-6:30 PM: Course and Policy Memo Assignment Overview
Session 2 – 6:45PM-8:00 PM: Marcelo Korc, Unit Chief, Climate Change and Environmental Determinants of Health, Pan American Health Organization.
Saturday, November 7
Session 3 – 8:30 AM-9:45 AM: Group Activity on Health Issue and Policy Advocacy
Note: Students arriving more than 5 minutes late will not be assigned to a breakout group nor be able to complete the assignment sheet associated with this activity. Please arrive on time to be assigned a group and case study.
Session 4 – 10:00 AM-11:15 AM: Yonten Nyima, Department of Human Geography, Wagner Graduate School of Public Service, New York University
Session 5 – 11:30 AM-12:45 PM: Noah Thierault, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Department of History, Carnegie Mellon University
LUNCH 1:00 PM-2:15 PM
Session 6 – 2:15 PM-3:30 PM: Caryl Waggett, Department of Global Health Studies and Environmental Sciences/Studies, Allegheny College
Session 7 – 3:45 PM-5:00 PM: "A Climate of Racial-Colonial Violence" by Michael Murphy, Assistant Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Pittsburgh
Session 8 – 5:15 PM-6:30 PM: Group Activity: Comparing Analyses from Session 3
Note: Students arriving more than 5 minutes late will not be assigned to a breakout group nor be able to complete the assignment sheet associated with this activity. Please arrive on time to be assigned a group and case study
Sunday, November 8
Pre-Class Work: Prior to the Sunday session, students should decide upon an issue related to global health and climate change and select a community to focus on. This will be necessary for work related to Session 9 and 11. This will also optimize your time in relation to the policy memo as these two worksheets scaffold with that assignment.
Session 9 – 8:30 AM-9:30 AM: Comparing Disciplines and Perspectives
Session 10 – 9:45 AM-11:45 AM: Practicing Community Discussions to a Global Health Problem: A Case Study Activity
Note: Students arriving more than 5 minutes late will not be assigned to a breakout group nor be able to complete the assignment sheet associated with this activity. Please arrive on time to be assigned a group and case study.
Session 11 – 12:00 PM-1:00 PM: Workshopping Your Policy Memo
Sponsored by: University of Pittsburgh's Global Studies Center
Veronica Dristas
University of Pittsburgh; Associate Director; Global Studies Center
dristas@pitt.edu