LSE100A Half Unit
The LSE Course: How can we transform our climate futures?
This information is for the 2023/24 session.
Teacher responsible
Dr Christopher Blunt KSW.4.12 and Dr Jillian Terry KSW.4.11
Availability
All first year undergraduate students take one of LSE100A, LSE100B or LSE100C.
Course content
LSE100 is LSE’s flagship interdisciplinary course taken by all first-year undergraduate students as part of your degree programme. The course is designed to build your capacity to tackle multidimensional problems through research-rich education, giving you the opportunity to explore transformative global challenges in collaboration with peers from other departments and leading academics from across the School. Before registering at LSE, you will have the opportunity to select one of three themes to focus on during LSE100, each of which foregrounds a complex and pressing question facing social scientists. In 2023/24, the available themes are:
- How can we transform our climate futures?
- How can we control AI?
- How can we create a fair society?
In the ‘How can we transform our climate futures?’ theme, you will investigate how social scientific research can underpin our response to climate change. With ambitious vision and decisive action, there is still time to reach the international community's aim of limiting global temperatures to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels. Amid competing ideas of what a net zero world would entail, we ask: how should we reshape our political, economic, social and legal systems to meet the needs of a sustainable future? In what ways should we act on climate change to create thriving and inclusive communities on both local and global scales?
This module explores questions of agency, responsibility, and solidarity to better understand the complex social, political and economic systems that combine to threaten the future of our environment. What are the planetary limits of economic growth? Will a circular approach transform our economies for the better, or will it put too much power in the hands of the market? How do systems of waste and consumption reinforce colonial narratives and widen global inequalities?
Throughout LSE100, you will investigate the ways in which systems are being transformed by a changing climate as you consider how we might tackle the challenges that lie ahead. You will learn to use the tools and frameworks of systems thinking in order to analyse the impacts of environmental degradation, broaden your intellectual experience, and deepen your understanding of your own discipline as you test theories, evidence and ideas from different disciplinary perspectives.
Teaching
7 hours and 30 minutes of seminars in the AT. 7 hours and 30 minutes of seminars in the WT.
90-minute seminars take place in alternate weeks. Students will attend an LSE100 seminar in either weeks 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 or weeks 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 of Autumn Term, and weeks 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9 or weeks 2, 4, 6, 8 and 10 of Winter Term.
AT: Seminar – 5 x 90min
WT: Seminar – 5 x 90min
In addition to seminars students will engage with bespoke video lectures featuring academics from across the School (approx. 20 minutes per seminar).
Formative coursework
In seminars throughout both terms, students will practice:
- analysing quantitative and qualitative data
- using systems thinking and systems change tools
- constructing and communicating evidence-based academic arguments
Teachers will provide feedback during seminars and in post-seminar communications to groups and individuals.
During the Winter Term, groups will have the opportunity to submit and receive formative feedback on a project brief, summarising their research project. Students will also try out the tools of systems thinking and systems change that they will use in their summative group research project.
Indicative reading
The following readings are indicative of the texts students will be assigned. The total amount of reading assigned for each seminar will be a maximum of 20 pages.
- Jason Hickel (2021) Less is More: how degrowth will save the world (London: Penguin Random House)
- Elinor Ostrom (2008). ‘Tragedy of the commons', in Steven N. Durlauf and Lawrence E. Blume (eds.) The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics, 2nd edition.
- Kate Ervine (2012). ‘The politics and practice of carbon offsetting: Silencing dissent', New Political Science, 34(1), pp.1-20.
- Camila Moreno, Daniel Speich Chasse & Lili Fuhr (2016). Carbon Metrics: global abstractions and ecological epistemicide (Heinrich Boll Stiftung: Publication Series Ecology, Vol.42).
- Jessie Kindig (ed.) (2022). Property Will Cost Us the Earth: Direct Action and the Future of the Global Climate Movement. (London: Verso)
- Naomi Klein (2014). This Changes Everything: Capitalism vs the Climate, (London: Allen Lane)
- Murray, A., Skene, K. & Haynes, K. (2017). ‘The Circular Economy: An Interdisciplinary Exploration of the Concept and Application in a Global Context’. J Bus Ethics, 140, 369–380.
- Walter R. Stahel (2016). ‘The circular economy’. Nature 531, 435–438.
- Oran R. Young (2017). ‘The age of complexity’ in Governing Complex Systems: Social Capital for the Anthropocene (MIT Press)
Assessment
Coursework (50%, 1000 words) in the AT.
Project (50%) in the WT.
Summative assessment will include an individual written assessment in the Autumn Term (50%) and a collaborative research project in the Winter Term (50%).
Key facts
Department: LSE
Total students 2022/23: 377
Average class size 2022/23: 25
Capped 2022/23: No
Value: Half Unit
Course selection videos
Some departments have produced short videos to introduce their courses. Please refer to the course selection videos index page for further information.
Personal development skills
- Leadership
- Self-management
- Team working
- Problem solving
- Application of information skills
- Communication
- Application of numeracy skills