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¸£Àû±ÆÕ¾ Catalog 2024-2025

Human Dimensions of Natural Resources (Minor)

This is an archived copy of the 2024-2025 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit .

The Human Dimensions of Natural Resources Graduate Minor provides master’s and doctoral students at NC State with the skills of using social science to solve natural resource management issues, build partnerships and communicate research with the public.

Master’s students who pursue this minor must complete a total of nine credit hours, while doctoral students must complete a total of 12 credit hours. Six credit hours are earned in required courses, with three or six additional credits earned from choosing among a wide range of electives. A student must earn a grade of B or higher in each of the required courses to complete the minor.

More Information

  • To be considered for this program, you will need to submit an application to the Department of Parks, Recreation and Tourism for approval.
  • If accepted, the department’s Director of Graduate Programs will add an approved faculty member to your graduate committee.
  • Once your application has been accepted, you will need to indicate the appropriate minor on your official work plan before signing up for courses.

Plan Requirements

Master's Requirements

Required Courses6
Human Behavior and the Environment
Human Dimensions of Wildlife and Fisheries
Elective Courses3
Select a course listed under "Elective Courses" approved in conjunction with the academic committee
Total Hours9

Doctoral Requirements

Required Courses6
±Ê¸é°ÕÌý550Human Behavior and the Environment3
¹ó°ÂÌý511Human Dimensions of Wildlife and Fisheries3
Elective Courses6
Select two courses listed under "Elective Courses" approved in conjunction with the academic committee
Total Hours18

Elective Courses

PRTM Graduate Programs

±Ê¸é°ÕÌý555Environmental Impacts of Recreation and Tourism3
±Ê¸é°ÕÌý560Theory and Practice of Partnerships for Conservation and Community Sustainability3
±Ê¸é°ÕÌý700Concepts and Theories of Leisure and Recreation3
±Ê¸é°ÕÌý701Research Methods in Parks, Recreation, & Tourism Management3
±Ê¸é°ÕÌý705Foundations of Qualitative Research in Social and Environmental Justice3

FWCB and FER Graduate Programs

¹ó°ÂÌý730Ethics in Fisheries and Wildlife Sciences2

NR Graduate Programs

±·¸éÌý500Natural Resource Management4
±·¸éÌý571Current Issues in Natural Resource Policy3

College of Humanities and Social Sciences (CHASS) Graduate Programs

´¡±·°ÕÌý516Research Methods in Cultural Anthropology3
´¡±·°ÕÌý550Culture, Ecology, and Sustainable Living3
´¡±·°ÕÌý575Environmental Archaeology3
±á±õÌý540American Environmental History3
±á±õÌý587Cultural Resource Management3
±Ê´¡Ìý515Research Methods and Analysis3
±Ê´¡Ìý550Environmental Policy3
±Ê´¡Ìý552Science and Technology Policy3
³§°¿°äÌý763Environmental Sociology3

pUBLIC sCIENCE gRADUATE pROGRAMS

·¡²Ñ³§Ìý594Special Problems In Science Teaching (Learning in Informal Contexts)1-3
·¡²Ñ³§Ìý794Special Problems in Science Teaching (Learning in Informal Contexts)3-6

College of Design Graduate Programs

³¢´¡¸éÌý542Human Use of the Urban Landscape3

Professors

  • Jason N Bocarro
  • Frederick Willis Cubbage
  • Jason Aaron Delborne
  • Myron Fran Floyd
  • George R Hess
  • Yu-Fai Leung
  • Christopher E Moorman
  • Norman Aaron Mowatt
  • Stacy Arnold Charles Nelson
  • Markus Nils Peterson
  • Erin Lynn Seekamp
  • Erin Sills

Associate Professors

  • Jennifer Richmond Bryant
  • Caren Beth Cooper
  • Bethany Brooke Cutts
  • James Aaron Hipp
  • Madhusudan Vithal Katti
  • Lincoln Ray Larson
  • Kathryn Tate Stevenson

Assistant Professors

  • Rajan Parajuli
  • Jelena Vukomanovic