Chapter 6.4

Political Ecology and Governance: Where Power Meets the Planet

Explore how political systems, territorial sovereignty, and governance frameworks shape environmental management and respond to ecological challenges that transcend national borders.


What You'll Learn

Political ecology links power structures with environmental resource management globally.
Transboundary ecosystems challenge traditional sovereignty and require innovative governance frameworks.
Climate change reshapes territorial boundaries, migration patterns, and international political relationships.
Key terms include bioregionalism, watershed management, and adaptive environmental governance.

What You'll Practice

1

Students analyze how environmental challenges transcend traditional political boundary frameworks.

2

Practice questions examine Arctic governance, watershed politics, and climate migration scenarios.

3

Learners apply political ecology vocabulary to real-world resource and sovereignty conflicts.

Why This Matters

Understanding political ecology and governance equips students to analyze how power, territory, and environmental systems intersectskills essential for informed citizenship and policy analysis in an era of global ecological challenges.

This Unit Includes

Practice exercises
Learning resources

Skills

Political Ecology
Environmental Governance
Watershed Management
Territorial Sovereignty
Transboundary Resources
ns flag

NS Curriculum Aligned

Pug instructor