MN32183: Business and the natural environment
[Page last updated: 23 May 2025]
Academic Year: | 2025/26 |
Owning Department/School: | School of Management |
Credits: | 10 [equivalent to 20 CATS credits] |
Notional Study Hours: | 200 |
Level: | Honours (FHEQ level 6) |
Period: |
- Semester 1
|
Assessment Summary: | CWES 100% |
Assessment Detail: | |
Supplementary Assessment: |
- Like-for-like reassessment (where allowed by programme regulations)
|
Requisites: |
In taking this module you cannot take MN20448
|
Learning Outcomes: |
Having studied the unit, students will be able to:
- Summarise, describe, and critically engage with the main science related to the contemporary environmental debate.
- Understand and evaluate the ethical, economic, and governance issues involved in a variety of environmental policy initiatives, and develop the capacity to critically, actively and creatively contribute to public debates concerned with environmental issues.
- Appreciate the increasing pressures from stakeholders for beyond compliance performance in respect of environmental issues.
- Use their understanding of environmental issues to propose, evaluate, and critique the validity and scope of organisational responses to environmental issues.
- Effectively communicate and defend ideas concerned with environmental issues in writing.
- Understand and apply theories and approaches from multiple disciplinary foundations to environmental issues and challenges.
- Interpret data and evidence regarding environmental issues.
|
Synopsis: | This unit is an introduction to complex interactions between social, political, cultural, economic and ecological factors in the field of environmental management. By doing so, it puts the environmental issues we - and businesses - currently face into context, and provides students with an understanding of the key concepts, theories, and evidence from the wide variety of disciplines that inform effective management of environmental issues.
|
Content: | Environmental issues are increasing salient within society. Human activity has caused or contributed to a range of serious environmental issues including pollution, deforestation, reduction in biodiversity, species extinction, climate change and global warming, and resource depletion. The dramatic increase in society's concern about the state of the environment has led to substantially greater pressure on business to respond to these challenges. The unit is designed to provide students with the knowledge to understand dynamic ecological and environmental processes and their implications for how organisations respond to them.
|
Course availability: |
MN32183 is Optional on the following courses:
Department of Chemistry
- USCH-AFB22 : BSc(Hons) Chemistry with Management (Year 3)
- USCH-AFM22 : MSci(Hons) Chemistry with Management (Year 3)
School of Management
- UMMN-AFB10 : BSc(Hons) Accounting and Finance (Year 3)
- UMMN-AKB02 : BSc(Hons) Accounting and Finance with Year long work placement (Year 4)
- UMMN-AFB11 : BSc(Hons) Accounting and Management (Year 3)
- UMMN-ANB07 : BSc(Hons) Business with Thin sandwich placement(s) (Year 4)
- UMMN-AYB06 : BSc(Hons) International Management with Year Abroad (Year 4)
- UMMN-AFB14 : BSc(Hons) Management (Year 3)
- UMMN-AKB04 : BSc(Hons) Management with Year long work placement (Year 4)
- UMMN-AKB05 : BSc(Hons) Management with Marketing with Year long work placement (Year 4)
Department of Politics, Languages and International Studies
- UXXX-AYB05 : BSc(Hons) International Management and Modern Languages (French) with Year Abroad (Year 4)
- UXXX-AYB04 : BSc(Hons) International Management and Modern Languages (German) with Year Abroad (Year 4)
- UXXX-AYB06 : BSc(Hons) International Management and Modern Languages (Spanish) with Year Abroad (Year 4)
|
Notes: - This unit catalogue is applicable for the 2025/26 academic year only. Students continuing their studies into 2026/27 and beyond should not assume that this unit will be available in future years in the format displayed here for 2025/26.
- 好色tv and units are subject to change in accordance with normal University procedures.
- Availability of units will be subject to constraints such as staff availability, minimum and maximum group sizes, and timetabling factors as well as a student's ability to meet any pre-requisite rules.
- Find out more about these and other important University terms and conditions here.
|