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Advanced & Graduate: 500 & 600-level

500-level classes are open to graduate students, and with permission of the instructor, advanced undergraduates (typically U3).

GEOG 502. Geography of Northern Development.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Analysis of the evolution of development policies and their spatial implications in circumpolar areas with an emphasis on the application of geographical concepts. Special attention is given to indigenous peoples and new immigrant populations in northern North America.
  • Fall
  • 3 hours
  • Prerequisite (Undergraduate): GEOG 301 or GEOG 436, or permission of instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 503. Advanced Topics in Health Geography.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

A critical review of current themes and trends in health geography, with emphasis on geographical perspectives in public health research. Topics include the social and environmental determinants of chronic and infectious disease, health and health-related behaviours. Seminars focus on critical appraisal of conceptual and methodological approaches in health geography research.
  • Fall
  • 3 hours
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 303 or GEOG 403 or permission of instructor
  • Restrictions: Course open to U3 undergraduate students and graduate students in the Department of Geography OR others with permission of instructor. Not open to students who took GEOG 503 in Winter 2009.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

ÌýOutline [Fall 2020]
The link above should have the following as course description:
GEOG 503 Advanced Topics in Health Geography
Geography: A critical review of current themes and trends in health geography, with an emphasis on housing as a place-based determinant of health and as a setting for intervention, i.e. how changes in housing conditions can translate into improvements in health and well-being. Seminars focus on critical appraisal of conceptual and methodological approaches in health geography and related disciplines.


GEOG 504. Advanced Economic Geography.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

The objective of this seminar course is to develop an understanding of the geographical dimensions of a variety of new forms of economic and social organization that are emerging across the globe. Key themes focus on innovation, technological and managerial change, evolutionary economic geography, globalization, and changing geographies of inequality.
  • Winter
  • Prerequisites: GEOG 311 or permission of instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 505. Global Biogeochemistry.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

An examination of the storage, transfers and cycling of major elements and substances, with an emphasis on the global scale and the linkages between the atmosphere, hydrosphere, lithosphere and biosphere.
  • Winter
  • 2 hours and research
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 305 or GEOG 322 and permission of instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Winter 2022]draft


GEOG 506. Advanced Geographic Information Science.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Critically analyse major themes in geographic information science and draw out the practical ramifications for spatial technologies and research. Topics such as spatial interoperability, data quality, scale, visualization, location based services and ontologies are covered.
  • Winter
  • 2 hours and laboratory
  • Prerequisite: (Undergraduate): GEOG 384 or GEOG 414; and permission of the instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 507. Advanced Social Geography.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Current theories and themes in social geography, such as relations between society and space, social and spatial relations of inequality, difference and diversity, situated and embodied identities, social issues and problems, connections between society and nature, all within a spatial framework.
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 331 or equivalent, and permission of instructor.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Winter 2019]


GEOG 509. Qualitative Methods.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Qualitative methods that geographers use and the debates surrounding their use; epistemological underpinnings of methodological choices.
  • Fall
  • Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 510. Humid Tropical Environments.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Focus on the environmental and human spatial relationships in tropical rain forest and savanna landscapes. Human adaptation to variations within these landscapes through time and space. Biophysical constraints upon "development" in the modern era.
  • Fall
  • 3 hours
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 203 or equivalent and written permission of the instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 511. Advanced Political Geography.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Questions of space and power in contemporary political geography. Range of topics, including territoriality, the state, the politics of space, critical geopolitics, symbolic landscapes, and GIS and mapping. Emphasizes theoretical issues but includes empirical and/or case studies.
  • Restriction(s): Undergraduate students require the permission of the instructor to enroll.
  • To obtain permission, students should email the instructor, Prof. Forest, benjamin.forest [at] mcgill.ca. The class is intended to appeal broadly to graduate students in human geography.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 512. Advanced Quantitative Methods in Social Field Research.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

How does one collect data to quantitatively assess research questions in human geography or other social sciences, and what methods are available to analyze those data? This course introduces students to advanced statistical techniques commonly confronted in field-based social science studies. The course is divided into four major topics: research design, evaluating impacts of policies or programs, time-series data, and spatial interactions. For the techniques investigated, the course will highlight major technical assumptions, field considerations for data collection, and how each does or does not account for geographic factors that may influence outcomes of interest.
  • Prerequisite(s): GEOG 351 or SOCI 504 or SOCI 505 or ECON 337, or equivalent experience in applied multivariate regression with permission of instructor.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Fall 2022]


GEOG 514. Climate Change Vulnerability and Adaptation.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

A critical examination of: the theoretical and conceptual evolution of climate change vulnerability and adaptation research; methodological developments from the role of model-driven assessments to the rise of participatory case study research, and the integration of vulnerability research into adaptation planning.
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 406 or ECON 347, or equivalent with permission of instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Fall 2022]


GEOG 515. Contemporary Dilemmas of Development.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Analysis of acute geographic dilemmas of international development. Emphasis on 1) rural systems and the problems of agrobiodiversity, land tenure, conflict, food relief, refugees and migration, the peace process, geopolitics and diplomacy; 2) role of development programs and agendas of the international community, the workings of development On the Ground (TM).
  • Prerequisite(s): GEOG 310, GEOG 408, or a 400-level course in development
  • Restriction(s): Only open to U3 students with permission of instructor.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Fall 2022]


GEOG 523. Global Ecosystems and Climate.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Linkages and feedbacks among climate, ecosystems, and human land use at global scales. How global-scale ecological processes (primary production, carbon cycle, etc.) are driven by variations in climate and land use practices such as agriculture and deforestation. How natural and human-modified ecosystems exchange carbon and water with the atmosphere.
  • Fall
  • 3 hours
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 203 and 321 or equivalent, or permission of the instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 525. Asian Cities in the 21st Century.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

This course examines current themes relating to mass urbanization in Asia in a range of contexts and the forces that shape the built environment of Asian cities. Various approaches to understanding Asian cities and current theoretical debates will be investigated, including recent critiques of western-centric theorizations of urban change in the region. The course examines a variety of themes through which students will gain familiarity with some of the major strands relating to urban change in Asia: national identity, neoliberalism, social exclusions, migration, religion, ethnicity and sustainability.
  • Prerequisite(s): GEOG 325, or 9 credits of Geography courses in Urban Geography, or permission of the instructor.
  • Open to graduate students and final year undergraduates.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 530. Global Land and Water Resources.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Linkage of physical processes (hydrology and ecosystems) with issues of societal and socio-economic relevance (land, food, and water use appropriation for human well-being). Application of a holistic perspective on land, food and water issues in an international setting, highlighting linkages, feedbacks and trade-offs in an Earth system context.
  • Prerequisite(s): GEOG 203 or ESYS 200 or ENVR 200 or equivalent; GEOG 322 or BREE 217 or equivalent; or permission of instructor.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 535. Remote Sensing and Interpretation.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Basic photogrammetry and interpretation procedures for aircraft and space craft photography and imagery.
  • Winter
  • 3 hours
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 308 and written permission of instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 536. Geocryology.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Study of the unique geomorphic aspects of periglacial and permafrost environments. The focus will be on processes in cold climates, the impact of human activity on permafrost landscapes and potential impacts of climatic change.
  • Fall
  • 3 hours
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 272 and any 300-level geomorphology course approved by instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 537. Advanced Fluvial Geomorphology.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

An examination of current advances in fluvial geomorphology: sediment entrainment and transport, alluviation and river channel evolution.
  • Winter
  • Prerequisite (Undergraduate): permission of instructor

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 540. Topics in Geography 1.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

In-depth review of a current topic in physical geography.
  • Winter
  • Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  • Note: This course is offered on an irregular basis. See Geography website () for current status.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 541. Topics in Geography 2.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

In-depth review of a current topic in human geography.
  • Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  • Note: This course is offered on an irregular basis. See Geography website () for current status.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 542. Advanced Studies in Geography 1.

Credits: 1
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Intensive review of a current topic or technique in physical geography.
  • Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  • Note: This course is offered on an irregular basis. See Geography website () for current status.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 543. Advanced Studies in Geography 2.

Credits: 1
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Intensive review of a current topic or technique in human geography.
  • Prerequisite: Permission of instructor.
  • Note: This course is offered on an irregular basis. See Geography website () for current status.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 550. Historical Ecology Techniques.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Principles and methods of Quaternary paleoecology and vegetation reconstruction. Examination of ecosystem response to human disturbance and environmental change.
  • Fall
  • 2 hours, laboratory and seminar
  • Prerequisite: GEOG 350 or BIOL 215 or PLNT 460 or permission of instructor.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


Course information not available.


GEOG 555. Ecological Restoration.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Faculty of Science)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

A broad overview of ecological restoration. Considers causes of environmental degradation, why and what we restore, how restoration goals are set, and standards in restoration practice, as well as critiques and philosophies of ecological restoration, such as "ecocultural" restoration.
  • Prerequisites: GEOG 350 or BIOL 308 or PLNT 460 and permission of instructor.
  • Note: Requires participation in a field trip over reading week. Offered in alternate years.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.


GEOG 601. Advanced Environmental Systems Modelling.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Graduate Studies)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Simulation of environmental systems, focusing on problem definition, model development and model validation.
  • Restriction: Students taking this course need to have an undergraduate background in an atmospheric, ecological, earth,or environmental science or an undergraduate background in environmental engineering.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Fall 2022]


GEOG 617. Advanced Urban Geography.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Graduate Studies)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

Classic and contemporary perspectives in urban geography. Range of topics including effects of capitalism, gender, suburbanism, segregation and inequality, property, urban landscapes, and urban space. Emphasizes theoretical issues but includes empirical and/or case studies.
  • Restriction(s): Permission of instructor.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Winter 2024]


GEOG 631. Methods of Geographical Research.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Graduate Studies)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

General research seminar in human and physical geography.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

ÌýPDF icon Outline [Fall 2024]


GEOG 670. Wetlands-Advanced.

Credits: 3
Offered by: Geography (Graduate Studies)
This course is not offered this catalogue year.

Description

A review of the classification, ecosystem services, and biophysical aspects of wetlands: soils, hydrology, and adaptations of biota with an emphasis on ecological biogeography. Includes major ecological processes that occur in wetlands and the environmental factors that control the structure and function of wetland systems. Techniques for studying plant communities are emphasized and applied to 3 different types of wetlands through field and laboratory work.
  • Prerequisite(s): Permission of instructor
  • 3 day field trip from Levis to Quebec city and across the St. Laurence. There will be a student fee charged in the amount of $68. Fees will cover meals (lunch and dinner), accommodations, ground transportation.

Most students use Visual Schedule Builder (VSB) to organize their schedules. VSB helps you plan class schedules, travel time, and more.

Outline [Fall 2022]

A fee of $165.00 is charged to all students registered in GEOG 670. The fee will be used to support the cost of transportation (van rental, parking, and gas) additional cost for accommodations and food will be the students responsibility. The trip is required and will give students an opportunity to conduct field study in at least 3 different types of wetlands.

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