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CS 400T

Risk Communication

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We live in a world we have come to understand as increasingly “risky,” from the food and water we consume, the viruses and bacteria we encounter, the technologies on which we increasingly depend, and to the global political scene that seems more and more volatile. In the words of Ulrich Beck, we live in what might best be characterized as a Risk Society in which the concept of risk permeates our everyday lives. In this senior seminar, we will explore how health, environmental, economic, social, and technological risks are represented and the role communication plays in their management. We will address the ways that information (and misinformation) about risk works as a tool of governance, and how we as individuals come to understand, negotiate, and assess risk as a fixture in our daily lives. This seminar will hinge on working through case studies that address a variety of topical risk issues, including the role of communication practices in producing our ideas about risk and the response to, say, viral panemics, Superbugs, climate change, nuclear meltdowns, economic crises, lab-grown meat, Artificial Intelligence, or even unidentified aerial phenomena (AUPs, formerly UFOs).

We live in a world we have come to understand as increasingly “risky,” from the food and water we consume, the viruses and bacteria we encounter, the technologies on which we increasingly depend, and to the global political scene that seems more and more volatile. In the words of Ulrich Beck, we live in what might best be characterized as a Risk Society in which the concept of risk permeates our everyday lives. In this senior seminar, we will explore how health, environmental, economic, social, and technological risks are represented and the role communication plays in their management. We will address the ways that information (and misinformation) about risk works as a tool of governance, and how we as individuals come to understand, negotiate, and assess risk as a fixture in our daily lives. This seminar will hinge on working through case studies that address a variety of topical risk issues, including the role of communication practices in producing our ideas about risk and the response to, say, viral panemics, Superbugs, climate change, nuclear meltdowns, economic crises, lab-grown meat, Artificial Intelligence, or even unidentified aerial phenomena (AUPs, formerly UFOs).

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We live in a world we have come to understand as increasingly “risky,” from the food and water we consume, the viruses and bacteria we encounter, the technologies on which we increasingly depend, and to the global political scene that seems more and more volatile. In the words of Ulrich Beck, we live in what might best be characterized as a Risk Society in which the concept of risk permeates our everyday lives. In this senior seminar, we will explore how health, environmental, economic, social, and technological risks are represented and the role communication plays in their management. We will address the ways that information (and misinformation) about risk works as a tool of governance, and how we as individuals come to understand, negotiate, and assess risk as a fixture in our daily lives. This seminar will hinge on working through case studies that address a variety of topical risk issues, including the role of communication practices in producing our ideas about risk and the response to, say, viral panemics, Superbugs, climate change, nuclear meltdowns, economic crises, lab-grown meat, Artificial Intelligence, or even unidentified aerial phenomena (AUPs, formerly UFOs).


CS 400T

Risk Communication

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We live in a world we have come to understand as increasingly “risky,” from the food and water we consume, the viruses and bacteria we encounter, the technologies on which we increasingly depend, and to the global political scene that seems more and more volatile. In the words of Ulrich Beck, we live in what might best be characterized as a Risk Society in which the concept of risk permeates our everyday lives. In this senior seminar, we will explore how health, environmental, economic, social, and technological risks are represented and the role communication plays in their management. We will address the ways that information (and misinformation) about risk works as a tool of governance, and how we as individuals come to understand, negotiate, and assess risk as a fixture in our daily lives. This seminar will hinge on working through case studies that address a variety of topical risk issues, including the role of communication practices in producing our ideas about risk and the response to, say, viral panemics, Superbugs, climate change, nuclear meltdowns, economic crises, lab-grown meat, Artificial Intelligence, or even unidentified aerial phenomena (AUPs, formerly UFOs).

We live in a world we have come to understand as increasingly “risky,” from the food and water we consume, the viruses and bacteria we encounter, the technologies on which we increasingly depend, and to the global political scene that seems more and more volatile. In the words of Ulrich Beck, we live in what might best be characterized as a Risk Society in which the concept of risk permeates our everyday lives. In this senior seminar, we will explore how health, environmental, economic, social, and technological risks are represented and the role communication plays in their management. We will address the ways that information (and misinformation) about risk works as a tool of governance, and how we as individuals come to understand, negotiate, and assess risk as a fixture in our daily lives. This seminar will hinge on working through case studies that address a variety of topical risk issues, including the role of communication practices in producing our ideas about risk and the response to, say, viral panemics, Superbugs, climate change, nuclear meltdowns, economic crises, lab-grown meat, Artificial Intelligence, or even unidentified aerial phenomena (AUPs, formerly UFOs).

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We live in a world we have come to understand as increasingly “risky,” from the food and water we consume, the viruses and bacteria we encounter, the technologies on which we increasingly depend, and to the global political scene that seems more and more volatile. In the words of Ulrich Beck, we live in what might best be characterized as a Risk Society in which the concept of risk permeates our everyday lives. In this senior seminar, we will explore how health, environmental, economic, social, and technological risks are represented and the role communication plays in their management. We will address the ways that information (and misinformation) about risk works as a tool of governance, and how we as individuals come to understand, negotiate, and assess risk as a fixture in our daily lives. This seminar will hinge on working through case studies that address a variety of topical risk issues, including the role of communication practices in producing our ideas about risk and the response to, say, viral panemics, Superbugs, climate change, nuclear meltdowns, economic crises, lab-grown meat, Artificial Intelligence, or even unidentified aerial phenomena (AUPs, formerly UFOs).


CS 400T Prerequisites

CS 304 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 310 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 312 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 315 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 322 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 325 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 333 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 341 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 350 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 351 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 352 (Min. Grade D-) or CS 371 (Min. Grade D-)

CS 400T Leads To

No Leads To Information Available

CS 400T Restrictions

Must be enrolled in one of the following Levels:

Undergraduate (UG)

Must be enrolled in one of the following Year Levels:

Year 4 (4)

Course Schedule