The City That Care Forgot: The Roots, Ruin, and Rebirth of New Orleans
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Overview
Description
This is an interdisciplinary honors course taught from historical, cultural, and sociological perspectives. It will revisit the week of August 29, 2005, when Hurricane Katrina devastated the city of New Orleans and the wider Gulf Coast region. Our goal is to understand what unfolded during those days and during the subsequent weeks and months, linking those events to the city's storied past and still uncertain future. The course will focus on how human inaction transformed a natural disaster into an ongoing socioeconomic, political, and humanitarian catastrophe. During the course, we will uncover specific lessons that can be gleaned from Katrina using a variety of disciplinary/intellectual perspectives, including public policy, urban planning, levee engineering, hurricane science, environmental protection, as well as local, regional, and national history, economics, politics, and social structure. (Students will receive credit for only one of the following courses: ANT, BLS, HSP, or SOC 3120H. These courses may substitute for each other in the F-replacement policy.)
Career
Undergraduate
Credits
Value
3
Max
3
Min
3
Course Count
1
Number Of Credits
3
Number Of Repeats
1
Repeatable
No
Contact Use
Yes
Generate Attendance
No
Left Use
Yes
Present Use
Yes
Reason Use
Yes
Tardy Use
Yes
Template Override
No
Time Use
Yes
Attendance Type
Class Meeting
Auto Create
No
Code
LEC
Instructor Contact Hours
3
Default Section Size
30
Final Exam Type
Yes
Include in Dynamic Date Calc
No
Instruction Mode
In Person
LMS File Type
Blackboard CourseInfo 4
Name
Lecture
OEE Workload Hours
0
Optional Component
No
Preferred Room Features
Academic Scheduling
Workload Hours
3