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MIT Sloan Sustainability Initiative
Sustainability Courses
Credit: Marty Nee
Build your knowledge and grow your skills
Are you interested in exploring sustainability at MIT? Are you working toward earning the Sustainability Certificate? Whether you want to take one course or fully integrate sustainability into your curriculum, we have something for you. Below is a collection of MIT graduate level sustainability courses, all of which count towards the Sustainability Certificate requirements. While course details are provided, please verify course dates, times, and credits in the MIT course registration system, as updates may occur that are not immediately reflected on this page.
Are you interested in exploring sustainability at MIT?
You don’t have to pursue the certificate to explore sustainability at MIT! Check out sustainability courses for the current academic year below, all of which count toward certificate elective requirements, to expand your knowledge around key areas of sustainability.
Are you a Sustainability Certificate Student?
Stellic is the source of truth for your progress toward earning the certificate. This page showcases courses for the current academic year only – courses you took last year that count toward the certificate may not be listed here if they are not offered in the current academic year.
All students pursuing the Sustainability Certificate (except for EMBAs) must earn 45 units via three required courses and sustainability electives.
Our flagship courses provide MIT graduate students with the sustainability tools + strategies they need to take action. All students pursuing the Sustainability Certificate (except for EMBAs) must complete all three courses.
15.871 | Introduction to System Dynamics (6 units) or 15.873 System Dynamics in Business + Policy (9 Units)
15.915 | Business Strategies for a Sustainable Future "BSSF" (9 Units)
15.878 | Sustainable Business Lab "S-Lab" (9 Units)
—Approved courses from academic year 2025 and 2026:
Course Title
1.253
11.543
Transportation Policy, the environment, and Livable communities
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Transportation Policy, the environment, and Livable communities
Spring
12 Cr.
11.543
Spring 2025 | Examines the economic and political conflict between transportation and the environment. Investigates the role of government regulation, green business and transportation policy as a facilitator of economic development and environmental sustainability. Analyzes a variety of international policy problems, including government-business relations, the role of interest groups, non-governmental organizations, and the public and media in the regulation of the automobile; sustainable development; global warming; politics of risk and siting of transport facilities; environmental justice; equity; as well as transportation and public health in the urban metropolis. Provides students with an opportunity to apply transportation and planning methods to develop policy alternatives in the context of environmental politics. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: Coughlin, Salvucci
1.65
Atmospheric Boundary Layer Flows and Wind Energy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Atmospheric Boundary Layer Flows and Wind Energy
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Introduction into the atmospheric boundary layer (ABL) and turbulence, which is critical to applications including renewable energy generation, pollution, weather and climate modeling, and more. Topics include the origins of wind in the atmosphere, an introduction to turbulent flows, the atmosphere and the diurnal cycle; momentum balance, scaling, and TKE; buoyancy, stability, and Coriolis forces; Ekman layer and RANS modeling; experimental methods; data analysis of ABL field measurements; and large eddy simulation.
M. Howland
T Th 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
1.713
12.834
Land-Atmosphere Interactions
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Land-Atmosphere Interactions
Spring
12 Cr.
12.834
Spring 2026 | Topics include the exchange of mass, heat and momentum between the soil, vegetation or water surface and the overlying atmosphere; flux and transport in the turbulent boundary layer; and coupled balance of moisture and energy.
Faculty: D. Entekhabi
MW 3:00 - 5:30 PM
1.760
Carbon Management
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Carbon Management
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Introduces the carbon cycle and "climate solutions." Provides specialized knowledge to manage and offset carbon emissions for government entities and large corporations through nature-based solutions and technology. Students prepare a mini-project simulating the assessment of practices and technologies for removing carbon dioxide from the air for a specific organization, which prepares them to become professionals with the skills to help evaluate and manage carbon emissions. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: C. Terrer, C. Harvey
MW 1:00 - 2:30 PM
1.771
Global Change Science
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Global Change Science
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Introduces the basic principles and concepts in atmospheric physics, and climate dynamics, through an examination of: greenhouse gases emissions (mainly CO2), global warming, and regional climate change. Case studies are presented for the regional impacts of climate change on extreme weather, water availability, and disease transmission. This subject is an introduction to regional and global environmental problems for students in basic sciences and engineering. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: E. Eltahir
TTh 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
1.800
10.480
Chemicals in the Environment
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Chemicals in the Environment
Spring
12 Cr.
10.480
Spring 2026 |Introduction to environmental chemistry, focusing on the fate of chemicals in both natural and engineered systems. Covers equilibrium reactions (e.g., partitioning, dissolution/precipitation, acid-base, redox, metal complexation), and kinetically-controlled reactions (e.g., photolysis, free radical oxidation). Specific environmental topics covered include heavy metals in natural waters, drinking water, and soils; biogeochemical cycles; radioactivity in the environment; smog formation; greenhouse gases and climate change; and engineering for the prevention and remediation of pollution. Students taking the graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: J. Kroll
MF 1 - 2:30 PM
1.834J
2.834J
Exploring Sustainability at Different Scales
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Exploring Sustainability at Different Scales
Fall
12 Cr.
2.834J
Fall 2025 | Develops environmental accounting tools including energy, carbon, materials, land use, and possibly others, from small scales (e.g., products and processes) to larger scales, (e.g., companies, nations and global) to reveal how reoccurring human behavior patterns have dominated environmental outcomes. Involves visiting experts and readings in areas such as ethics, economics, governance, and development to frame core issues in human relationship to the environment and future societies. Explores how local actions, including engineering interventions and behavior change, play out at larger scales associated with the concept of sustainability, and how local actions may be modified to realize sustainability. Class is participatory and includes an exploratory project. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 25.
Faculty: T. Gutowski
MW 1:00 pm - 2:30 pm
1.861
Physics and Engineering of Renewable Energy Systems
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Physics and Engineering of Renewable Energy Systems
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Introduction to renewable energy generation in the context of the energy grid system. Focuses on computational analysis of energy systems. Topics include the energy grid and energy markets; fossil fuel generation; wind, solar, hydroelectric, and ocean energy; and energy storage. Tools, including computational models of wind energy generation and energy forecasting algorithms, introduced. Final project focuses on the development of low-carbon, low-cost energy systems. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: M. Howland
TTh 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
1.878
22.78
Nuclear Energy and the Environment: Waste, Effluents, and Accidents
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Nuclear Energy and the Environment: Waste, Effluents, and Accidents
Spring
12 Cr.
22.78
Spring 2026 | Introduces the essential knowledge for understanding nuclear waste management. Includes material flow sheets for nuclear fuel cycle, waste characteristics, sources of radioactive wastes, compositions, radioactivity and heat generation, chemical processing technologies, geochemistry, waste disposal technologies, environmental regulations and the safety assessment of waste disposal. Covers different types of wastes: uranium mining waste, low-level radioactive waste, high-level radioactive waste and fusion waste. Provides the quantitative methods to compare the environmental impact of different nuclear and other energy-associated waste. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: H. Wainwright
MW 1:00 - 2:30 PM
10.817
1.84
Atmospheric Chemistry
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Atmospheric Chemistry
Fall
12 Cr.
1.84
Fall 2024 | Provides a detailed overview of the chemical transformations that control the abundances of key trace species in the Earth's atmosphere. Emphasizes the effects of human activity on air quality and climate. Topics include photochemistry, kinetics, and thermodynamics important to the chemistry of the atmosphere; stratospheric ozone depletion; oxidation chemistry of the troposphere; photochemical smog; aerosol chemistry; and sources and sinks of greenhouse gases and other climate forcers.
Faculty: J. Kroll
T Th 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
10.986
Seminar in Energy Systems
Fall
| 6 Cr.
Seminar in Energy Systems
Fall
6 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Seminar series on current research on energy systems modeling and analysis.
Faculty: R. C. Armstrong
T 12:30 - 2:30 PM
11.202
Planning Economics
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Planning Economics
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H4 Students use economic theory tools acquired in 11.203 to understand the mutual processes of individual action and structural constraint and investigate crises in search of opportunities for mitigation and reparation. Investigates a variety of structural crises from throughout the realms of planning, such as: capitalism, climate change, and (in)action; white supremacy, segregation, and gentrification; colonialism, informality, and infrastructure; autocentricity and other legacies of the built environment.
Faculty: D. Bunten
TTh 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
11.255
Negotiation and Dispute Resolution in the Public Sector
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Negotiation and Dispute Resolution in the Public Sector
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Investigates social conflict and distributional disputes in the public sector. While theoretical aspects of conflict and consensus building are considered, focus is on the practice of negotiation and dispute resolution. Comparisons between unassisted and assisted negotiation are reviewed along with the techniques of facilitation and mediation.
Faculty: L. Susskind
TTh 3:30-5:30 PM
11.258
Sustainable Urbanization Research Seminar
Fall
| 3 Cr.
Sustainable Urbanization Research Seminar
Fall
3 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Reviews the seminal as well as latest research on the driving forces of urbanization, real estate markets, urban sustainability in both developed and developing economies. Examines the tensions as well as synergies between urbanization and sustainability, and designs and evaluates policies and business strategies that can enhance the synergies while reduce the tensions. Covers various research topics under the umbrella of urbanization under three modules (sustainable urbanization; sustainable real estate; urbanization in emerging economies) where students study the initiation of an idea to its publication, including but not limited to, analyzing, framing, writing and critiquing as parts of the process. Sessions are organized as a semi-structured dialogue.
Faculty: S. Zheng
M 12:30 PM - 2:00 PM
11.268
Laws of the Land: Land Use and Environmental Law and Policy
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Laws of the Land: Land Use and Environmental Law and Policy
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H3 Environmental justice and climate change are pressing contemporary concerns. Crucial dimensions of the exposure of households to environmental harms and benefits are determined by land use and environmental laws. Land use and environmental laws are also central to reducing carbon emissions and building environmentally sustainable and resilient communities. Introduces students to the legal and social science dimension of these two crucial areas of law that is well-covered in the current curriculum. Enrollment limited to 30.
Faculty: J. Steil
TTh 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
11.268
Laws of the Land: Land Use and Environmental Law and Policy
Fall
| 6 Cr.
Laws of the Land: Land Use and Environmental Law and Policy
Fall
6 Cr.
Fall 2025 | H1 Environmental justice and climate change are pressing contemporary concerns. Crucial dimensions of the exposure of households to environmental harms and benefits are determined by land use and environmental laws. Land use and environmental laws are also central to reducing carbon emissions and building environmentally sustainable and resilient communities. Introduces students to the legal and social science dimension of these two crucial areas of law that is well-covered in the current curriculum. Enrollment limited to 30.
Faculty: J. Steil
T Th 1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
11.269
Global Climate Policy and Sustainability
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Global Climate Policy and Sustainability
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2025 | Examines climate politics both nationally and globally. Addresses economic growth, environmental preservation, and social equity through the lens of sustainability. Uses various country and regional cases to analyze how sociopolitical, economic and environmental values shape climate policy. Students develop recommendations for making climate policy more effective and sustainable. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 25.
Faculty: J. Knox-Hayes
11.271
Indigenous Environmental Planning
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Indigenous Environmental Planning
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2025 | Examines how Indigenous peoples' relationships to their homelands and local environments has been adversely affected by Western planning. Explores how these relationships have changed over time as American Indians, Alaska Natives, and other groups indigenous to North America and Hawai'i have adapted to new conditions, including exclusion from markets of exchange, overhunting/overfishing, dispossession, petrochemical development, conservation, mainstream environmentalism, and climate change. Seeks to understand current environmental challenges and their roots and discover potential solutions to address these challenges.
Faculty: L. Susskind, J. Knox-Hayes, J. Pierite
W 9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
11.273
1.303
Infrastructure Design for Climate Change
Fall
| 6 Cr.
Infrastructure Design for Climate Change
Fall
6 Cr.
1.303
Fall 2025 | In this team-oriented, project-based subject, students work to find technical solutions that could be implemented to mitigate the effects of natural hazards related to climate change, bearing in mind that any proposed measures must be appropriate in a given region's socio-political-economic context. Students are introduced to a variety of natural hazards and possible mitigation approaches as well as principles of design, including adaptable design and design for failure. Students select the problems they want to solve and develop their projects. During the term, officials and practicing engineers of Cambridge, Boston, Puerto Rico, and MIT Facilities describe their approaches. Student projects are documented in a written report and oral presentation. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
H. Einstein
T Th 1:00 PM
11.302
4.253
Urban Design Politics
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Urban Design Politics
Spring
12 Cr.
4.253
Spring 2026 | Examines ways that urban design contributes to distribution of political power and resources in cities. Investigates the nature of relations between built form and political purposes through close study of public and private sector design commissions and planning processes that have been clearly motivated by political pressures, as well as more tacit examples. Lectures and discussions focus on cases from both developed and developing countries.
Faculty: L. Vale
M 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM
11.308
4.213
Ecological Urbanism Seminar
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Ecological Urbanism Seminar
Spring
12 Cr.
4.213
Spring 2026 |Weds the theory and practice of city design and planning as a means of adaptation with the insights of ecology and other environmental disciplines. Presents ecological urbanism as critical to the future of the city and its design, as it provides a framework for addressing challenges that threaten humanity — such as climate change, rising sea level, and environmental and social justice — while fulfilling human needs for health, safety, welfare, meaning, and delight. Applies a historical and theoretical perspective to the solution of real-world challenges. Enrollment limited.
Faculty: A. Spirn
M 2:00 - 5:00PM
11.310
Landscape Infrastructure for Climate Change
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Landscape Infrastructure for Climate Change
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 |Investigates the need for new ways to think about landscape architecture and infrastructure as the impact of climate change alters the way cities are designed and managed. Core focus is on responsive design, and implementation of hard and soft physical infrastructures (not policies) to mitigate climate impacts, including: heat, stormwater flooding, watershed management, coastal resilience, decarbonized transportation, and wildfire. Weekly lectures, case studies, and a series of short group design exercises to illustrate and evaluate new types of physical infrastructure projects that consider environmental and human systems needed for urban areas in the era of climate change. These exercises will be done during class in charette format, no prior design experience is required. 15, due to classroom size.
Faculty: A. Spirn
F 1:00 PM - 4:00 PM
11.350
Sustainable Real Estate: Analysis and Investment
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Sustainable Real Estate: Analysis and Investment
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H3 Offers insight into tension and synergy between sustainability and the real estate industry. Considers why sustainability matters for real estate, how real estate can contribute to sustainability and remain profitable, and what investment and market opportunities exist for sustainable real estate products and how they vary across asset classes. Lectures combine economic and business insights and tools to understand the challenges and opportunities of sustainable real estate. Provides a framework to understand issues in sustainability in real estate and examine economic mechanisms, technological advances, business models, and investment and financing strategies available to promote sustainability. Discusses buildings as basic physical assets; cities as the context where buildings interact with the built environment, policies, and urban systems; and portfolios as sustainable real estate investment vehicles in capital markets. Enrollment for MSRED, MCP, and MBA students is prioritized.
Faculty: S. Zheng
TTh 9:30 - 11:00 AM
11.367
Land Use Law and Politics: Race, Place, and Law
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Land Use Law and Politics: Race, Place, and Law
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Explores conceptions of spatial justice and introduces students to basic principles of US law and legal analysis, focused on land use, equal protection, civil rights, fair housing, and local government law, in order to examine who should control how land is used. Examines the rights of owners of land and the types of regulatory and market-based tools that are available to control land use. Explores basic principles of civil rights and anti-discrimination law and focuses on particular civil rights problems associated with the land use regulatory system, such as exclusionary zoning, residential segregation, the fair distribution of undesirable land uses, and gentrification. Introduces basic skills of statutory drafting and interpretation. Assignments differ for those taking the graduate version.
Faculty: J. Steil
TTh 2:00 PM - 3:30 PM
11.368
Environmental Justice: Law and Policy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Environmental Justice: Law and Policy
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Introduces frameworks for analyzing and addressing inequalities in the distribution of environmental benefits and burdens, particularly by race and by class. Explores the foundations and principles of the environmental justice movement from the perspectives of social science, public policy, and law. Introduces basic principles of US constitutional and environmental law, with a focus on equal protection and civil rights. Applies environmental justice principles to contemporary issues in urban policy and planning, including effects of and responses to climate change and global heating. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: J. Steil
11.369
Federalism and State and Local Government Law
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Federalism and State and Local Government Law
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 |Explores theories regarding the allocation of powers across levels of government, as well as the legal rules that structure the powers and obligations of state and local governments. Topics covered include: local government formation and boundary change, voting rights, conflicts among localities, state and local finance, and preemption. Focuses on the implications of these structures for climate change, civil rights, inequality, and socio-economic mobility. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
11.371J
1.818J
Sustainable Energy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Sustainable Energy
Fall
12 Cr.
1.818J
Fall 2025 | Assessment of current and potential future energy systems. Covers resources, extraction, conversion, and end-use technologies, with emphasis on meeting 21st-century regional and global energy needs in a sustainable manner. Examines various energy technologies in each fuel cycle stage for fossil (oil, gas, synthetic), nuclear (fission and fusion) and renewable (solar, biomass, wind, hydro, and geothermal) energy types, along with storage, transmission, and conservation issues. Emphasizes analysis of energy propositions within an engineering, economic and social context. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: K. Shirvan
T Th 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
11.381
Infrastructure Systems in Theory and Practice
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Infrastructure Systems in Theory and Practice
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Examines theories of infrastructure from science and technology studies, history, economics, and anthropology in order to understand the prospects for change for many new and existing infrastructure systems. Examines how these theories are then implemented within systems in the modern city, including but not limited to, energy, water, transportation, and telecommunications infrastructure. Seminar is conducted with intensive group research projects, in-class discussions and debates.
Faculty: D. Hsu
W 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
11.472
EC.781
D-Lab: Development
Fall
| 12 Cr.
D-Lab: Development
Fall
12 Cr.
EC.781
Fall 2025 | Issues in international development, appropriate technology and project implementation addressed through lectures, case studies, guest speakers and laboratory exercises. Students form project teams to partner with community organizations in developing countries, and formulate plans for an optional IAP site visit. (Previous field sites include Ghana, Brazil, Honduras and India.) Recitation sections focus on specific project implementation, and include cultural, social, political, environmental and economic overviews of the target countries as well as an introduction to the local languages. Enrollment limited by lottery; must attend first class session.
Faculty: L. Hsu
MW 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM
11.474
EC.715
D-Lab: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
Spring
| 12 Cr.
D-Lab: Water, Sanitation and Hygiene
Spring
12 Cr.
EC.715
Spring 2026 | Focuses on disseminating Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene (WASH) innovations in low-income countries and underserved communities worldwide. Structured around project-based learning, lectures, discussions, and student-led tutorials. Emphasizes core WASH principles, appropriate and sustainable technologies at household and community scales, urban challenges worldwide, culture-specific solutions, lessons from start-ups, collaborative partnerships, and social marketing. Mentored term project entails finding and implementing a viable solution focused on education/training; a technology, policy or plan; a marketing approach; and/or behavior change. Guest lecturers present case studies, emphasizing those developed and disseminated by MIT faculty, practitioners, students, and alumni. Field trips scheduled during class time, with optional field trips on weekends. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 20.
Faculty: S. Murcott, S. Hsu
TTh 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
11.477
1.286
Urban Energy Systems and Policy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Urban Energy Systems and Policy
Fall
12 Cr.
1.286
Fall 2025 | Examines efforts in developing and advanced nations and regions. Examines key issues in the current and future development of urban energy systems, such as technology, use, behavior, regulation, climate change, and lack of access or energy poverty. Case studies on a diverse sampling of cities explore how prospective technologies and policies can be implemented. Includes intensive group research projects, discussion, and debate
Faculty: D. Hsu
T Th 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
11.526
1.251
Comparative Land Use and Transportation Planning
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Comparative Land Use and Transportation Planning
Spring
12 Cr.
1.251
Spring 2026 | Focuses on the integration of land use and transportation planning, drawing from cases in both industrialized and developing countries. Highlights how land use and transportation influence the social organization of cities, assigning privileges to certain groups and segregating or negating access to the city to other groups. Covers topics such as accessibility; the use of data, algorithms, and bias; travel demand and travel behavior; governance; transit-oriented development; autonomous vehicles; transportation and real estate; and social, environmental, and health implications of land use and transportation. Develops students' skills to assess relevant policies, interventions, and impacts.
Faculty: F. Duarte
M 9:00 - 12:00 PM
11.540
Urban Transportation Planning and Policy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Urban Transportation Planning and Policy
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Examines transportation policymaking and planning; its relationship to social and environmental justice; and the influences of politics, governance structures, and human and institutional behavior. Explores the pathway to infrastructure, how attitudes are influenced, and how change happens. Examines the tensions and potential synergies among traditional transportation policy values of individual mobility, system efficiency, and "sustainability." Explores the roles of the government; analysis of current trends; transport sector decarbonization; land use, placemaking, and sustainable mobility networks; the role of "mobility as a service;" and the implications of disruptive technology on personal mobility. Assesses traditional planning methods with a critical eye, and through that process considers how to approach transportation planning in a way that responds to contemporary needs and values, with an emphasis on transport justice.
Faculty: J. Aloisi
F 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
11.547
SCM.287
Global Aging & the Built Environment
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Global Aging & the Built Environment
Spring
12 Cr.
SCM.287
Spring 2026 | Combines classroom lectures/discussion, readings, site visits, and field study to provide students with experience in various research techniques including stakeholder analysis, interviewing, photography and image analysis, focus groups, etc. Students examine the impacts of global demographic transition, when there are more older than younger people in a population, and explore emerging challenges in the built environment (e.g., age-friendly community planning, public transportation access, acceptance of driverless cars, social wellbeing and connectivity, housing and community design, design and use of public and private spaces, and the public health implications of climate change and aging).
Faculty: J. Coughlin
F 2:00 - 5:00 PM
11.592
Renewable Energy Facility Siting Clinic
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Renewable Energy Facility Siting Clinic
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Presents methods for resolving facility siting disputes, particularly those involving renewable energy. After completing four modules and a competency exam for MITx certification, students work in teams to help client communities in various cities around the United States. Through direct interactions with the proponents and opponents of facilities subject to local opposition, students complete a stakeholder assessment and offer joint fact-finding and collaborative problem-solving assistance. The political, legal, financial, and regulatory aspects of facility siting, particularly for renewable energy, are reviewed along with key infrastructure planning principles. Students taking the graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 15.
Faculty: L. Susskind, J. Chun
F 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
11.601
Theory and Practice of Environmental Planning
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Theory and Practice of Environmental Planning
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Required introductory subject for graduate students pursuing the Environmental Planning Certificate. Strongly suggested for MCP students pursuing EPP as their specialization. Also open to other graduate students interested in environmental justice, environmental ethics, environmental dispute resolution, and techniques of environmental problem-solving. Taught comparatively, with numerous references to examples from around the world. Four major areas of focus: national environmental policymaking, environmental ethics, environmental forecasting and analysis techniques, and strategies for collaborative decision-making.
Faculty: L. Susskind
T Th 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM
11.701
Intro to International Development Planning
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Intro to International Development Planning
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Studies interactions between planners and institutions at different scales, from local to global/transnational. Emphasizes historical and institutional approaches to development planning.
B. Rajagopal
T, Th 2:30 - 4:00 pm
11.S187
11.S955
Social Carbon Economy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Social Carbon Economy
Fall
12 Cr.
11.S955
Fall 2025 | The course explores the emerging basis of a social carbon economy and focuses on the understanding of how to integrate technology and social considerations into carbon management and emissions reduction strategies within urban areas. Urban areas are significant contributors to carbon emissions due to factors like transportation, industry, and energy consumption. Therefore, addressing carbon emissions in cities is crucial for global efforts to combat climate change. In an urban social carbon economy, the course will focus on efforts to reduce carbon emissions and will explore methodologies to design solutions with a focus on social equity, community well-being, and inclusive development within urban contexts.
The course examines the intersections that enable individuals, communities, institutions, and corporations to take action by actively measuring, monitoring, and reducing their carbon emissions. By deepening in the understanding of the power of Artificial Intelligence and behavior change, which has the potential to reduce carbon emissions by one-third globally, the new carbon economy will create opportunities to accelerate the net-zero goals across all industries. Students will deepen their understanding of carbon avoidance and reduction products and infrastructure that leverage existing and new technologies like AI, sensor fusion, gamification, blockchain, and incentive systems that will power the new economy."
Faculty: R. Almeida, R. Chin
T 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
11.S938
11.S195
A Multi-Disciplinary Approach to Urban Transport Planning
Fall
| 6 Cr.
A Multi-Disciplinary Approach to Urban Transport Planning
Fall
6 Cr.
11.S195
Fall 2024 | Urban analytics draws upon statistics, visualization, and computation to better understand and ultimately shape cities. This course emphasizes telling stories about cities and neighborhoods covering a set of fundamental concepts of descriptive approaches, quantitative and spatial analysis in R, and principles of reproducible data analysis. Students learn to communicate the results of visualization and analysis for use in decision-making and policy development and to critique those processes.
Faculty: Cong
MW 10:00 - 11:30 AM
11.S940
Hacking the Archive: A Field Guide to Co-Designing Alternative Urban Futures
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Hacking the Archive: A Field Guide to Co-Designing Alternative Urban Futures
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | This course offers a cross-disciplinary introduction to the archive as a site of contestation, erasure and possibility for students, planning practitioners and local communities seeking innovative models for city justice and reconciliation. Combining academic theory with client-engaged practice, this course gives students a hands-on learning opportunity to tackle ground level issues with real stakeholders in real time. Co-taught by a textile artist-historian and archival educator, students will be presented with a set of woven documents highlighting the major themes of the course: collective agency, social activism and diverse histories of resistance and disruption. Students will learn how to analyze these woven documents in order to become more nuanced readers of a variety of cultural objects including landscapes, urban plans and social histories spanning Toronto, Boston and Rochester (New York). This course will ultimately provide students with a research and action framework intent on destabilizing colonial modes of data extraction by re-centering community-driven design and use.
Faculty: K. Crockett
Th 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
11.S941
Designing urban energy intersections: An integrated, multi-scale approach in NYC
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Designing urban energy intersections: An integrated, multi-scale approach in NYC
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | How can integrated inter-scale design – from the systems level (e.g., energy systems, workforce systems, mobility systems) to the neighborhood level (e.g., street design, building design), the community level (e.g., engagement systems), and the “device” level (e.g., energy storage) – be used to co-create (with communities) green-economy based local economic development strategies? This workshop class aims to answer this question (taught in parallel with an Architecture Urban Design Studio) in collaboration with local government (NYC Economic Development Corporation, EDC) and a local community organization. The subject is driven by the theory of change that just urban transitions require work at the intersection of a range of needs and opportunities driven by the climate crisis, including designing: for waterfront resilience, systems for energy transitions (e.g., battery storage, vehicle electrification), and approaches to maximize community benefits (e.g., workforce training for “green jobs”, entrepreneurial development, cooperative ownership models).
Faculty: J. Phillip Thompson, L. Shepherd
11.S950
Rebuilding the American Region: Urban Design at Large Scale
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Rebuilding the American Region: Urban Design at Large Scale
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | The role of the region is changing. With limited resources, there is an urgency to address urban design and planning challenges that transcend local municipalities. Contemporary imperatives dictate new design strategies to advance contemporary urbanism with aging infrastructure, climate change, migration and an increasingly polarized social, racial and economic environment in the U.S.
Faculty: D. Gamble
F 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
11.S953
Indigenous Water and Energy Planning: Emergent Futures in Scaling Traditional Ecological Knowledge
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Indigenous Water and Energy Planning: Emergent Futures in Scaling Traditional Ecological Knowledge
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | This under/graduate-level reading seminar focuses on the critical intersections between Indigenous knowledge systems, water resources management, and environmental justice. The course centers readings in genres of Indigenous futurisms to cover the basics of Indigenous water and energy planning. Through the lens of these genres, guest lectures, discussions, and case studies, students will understand the emergent trends in the development of traditional ecological knowledge. At the end of the course, students will propose speculative projects to scale community-based water planning interventions and initiatives towards utility scale to support the sovereignty and self-determination of Indigenous governments.
Faculty: J. Knox-Hayes, J. Pierite
F 2:00 PM - 4:00 PM
12.707
The History of Earth's Climate
Spring
| 12 Cr.
The History of Earth's Climate
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 |Studies the climate history of the Earth, from the formation of the early atmosphere and ocean to the present. Evaluates geochemical, sedimentological, and paleontological evidence for changes in ocean circulation, global temperatures, and atmospheric carbon dioxide levels. Covers theories and models of Phanerozoic climate change. Provides a long-term history of the global carbon cycle. Students taking graduate version complete different assignments.
Faculty: K. Bergmann
MW 1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
12.740
Paleoceanography
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Paleoceanography
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Studies the basic principles of techniques for reconstructing the history of ocean climate from marine sediment cores, corals, ice cores, and other paleoclimate archives. Examines this data in the light of proposed climate change mechanisms. Micropaleontological, isotopic, geochemical, and mineralogical changes are used to infer changes in seawater composition, atmospheric chemistry, and climate. Observations are interpreted as consequences of changes in ocean temperature, circulation, and chemistry, and are used to evaluate theories proposed to account for glacial/interglacial cycles. Focuses on the past two million years, but major processes and events from the past 100 million years are also included.
Faculty: E. Boyle
12.812
The General Circulation of the Atmosphere and Climate Change
Fall
| 9 Cr.
The General Circulation of the Atmosphere and Climate Change
Fall
9 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Pre-Req 12.810 or Permission of Instructor Describes the general circulation of Earth's atmosphere and its maintenance. Second half of the course explores the response of the general circulation to climate change.
Faculty: T. Tamarin-Brodsky
MW 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
12.835
Experimental Atmospheric Chemistry
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Experimental Atmospheric Chemistry
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Introduces the atmospheric chemistry involved in climate change, air pollution, and ozone depletion using a combination of interactive laboratory and field studies and simple computer models. Uses instruments for trace gas and aerosol measurements and methods for inferring fundamental information from these measurements. Students taking the graduate version complete different assignments.
Faculty: R. Prinn, S. Ono
T Th 1:30 PM - 3:00 PM
12.860
Climate Variability and Diagnostics
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Climate Variability and Diagnostics
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 |Explores climate variability and change, focusing on the atmosphere and ocean, while building experience applying diagnostic analyses to a range of modern observations and models. Provides practical insight, from regional to global scale, with applications to past and future climates. Emphasizes salient features of the mean climate system and modes of natural variability, as well as observed and projected manifestations of anthropogenic climate change. Students gain experience accessing, analyzing, and visualizing a wide range of gridded observational-based datasets, as well as output from global climate model simulations. Develops the tools necessary to apply climate diagnostic analysis to one's own research, as well as the interdisciplinary edge to critically assess and interpret the observational and model results underpinning the Fifth Assessment Reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Faculty: A. Gonzalez
TTh 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
12.885
11.373
Science, Politics and Environmental Policy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Science, Politics and Environmental Policy
Fall
12 Cr.
11.373
Fall 2025 | Examines the role of science in US and international environmental policymaking. Surveys the methods by which scientists learn about the natural world; the treatment of science by experts, advocates, the media, and the public and the way science is used in legislative, administrative, and judicial decision making. Through lectures, group discussions, and written essays, students develop a critical understanding of the role of science in environmental policy. Potential case studies include fisheries management, ozone depletion, global warming, smog, and endangered species. Students taking graduate version complete different assignments. Limited to 22.
Faculty: Solomon, Knox-Hayes
F 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
14.003
Microeconomic Theory and Public Policy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Microeconomic Theory and Public Policy
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Students master and apply economic theory, causal inference, and contemporary evidence to analyze policy challenges. These include the effect of minimum wages on employment, the value of healthcare, the power and limitations of free markets, the benefits and costs of international trade, the causes and remedies of externalities, the consequences of adverse selection in insurance markets, the impacts of labor market discrimination, and the application of machine learning to supplement to decision-making. Class attendance and participation are mandatory. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: D. Autor
MW 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
14.475
Environmental Economics
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Environmental Economics
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Discusses theory and evidence on environmental externalities and regulatory, tax, and other government responses to problems of market failure.
Faculty: J. Moscona, B. Olken
TTh 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
15.014
15.012
Applied Macro- and International Economics II
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Applied Macro- and International Economics II
Spring
6 Cr.
15.012
Spring 2026 | H3 15.012 (fall) 15.014 (spring) Establishes understanding of the development processes of societies and economies. Studies several dimensions of sustainability (environmental, social, political, institutional, economy, organizational, relational, and personal) and the balance among them. Explores the basics of governmental intervention, focusing on areas such as the judicial system, environment, social security, and health. Builds skills to determine what type of policy is most appropriate. Considers implications of new technologies on the financial sector: internationalization of currencies, mobile payment systems, and cryptocurrencies. Discusses the institutional framework to ensure choices are sustainable across all dimensions and applications.
Faculty: R. Rigobon, A. Makarin
MW 8:30 - 10:00 AM
15.016J
14.450
Climate and Energy in the Global Economy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Climate and Energy in the Global Economy
Fall
12 Cr.
14.450
Fall 2025 | Provides students with a comprehensive understanding of the challenges, opportunities, and policy responses to the global climate and energy crises. Discusses the role of energy in world economies, paying particular attention to low- and middle-income countries, as well as the impacts of climate change on those economies. Considers how access, cost, reliability, and environmental harm drive or hinder economic growth, the political influences on the energy sector, the impacts of climate change on low- and middle-income countries, and the role of energy in mitigating future impacts of climate change. Also discusses global climate solutions, including the role of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change process, trade policy, climate finance, business strategies to reduce emissions, and business strategies to help people adapt to a changing climate. Students taking graduate students complete additional assignments.
Faculty: H. Kala, C. Wolfram
MW 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
15.018
Current Debates of Macroeconomics and Public Policy
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Current Debates of Macroeconomics and Public Policy
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2025 | H3 Concentrates on debates about current policy challenges. Students debate and vote on policy actions on current issues in developed and developing nations. Subjects include industrial policy, macroeconomics, poverty, social safety net, labor practices, immigration and labor markets, international economics, human rights, civil rights, democracy, environmental policy, regulation, and crypto assets. Topics change from year to year.
Faculty: R. Rigobon
W 5:30 PM - 8:00 PM
15.027
Opportunities in Developing Economies
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Opportunities in Developing Economies
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H4 Investigates the role of the private sector in developing economies, highlighting how solving market failures can improve overall welfare. Covers constraints faced by firms in developing economies: contract enforcement, corruption, political risk, human rights, IP and infrastructure. Uses case studies to discuss successful firms and innovative solutions to these constraints, including public-private partnerships, the role of technology, the role of finance and impact investing.
Faculty: T. Suri
TTh 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM
15.035
Energy Market Dynamics in a Decarbonizing Economy
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Energy Market Dynamics in a Decarbonizing Economy
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H4 Explores how energy markets function, what changes as the world decarbonizes, and the role of new technologies in this change. Examines how market outcomes are influenced by policies, with a focus on environmental policies. Uses economic tools to analyze efficiency and public policy challenges in interconnected energy and environmental markets. Topics include how electricity markets are shaped by large-scale renewable penetration, how decarbonization policies affect different regions and socio-economic groups, measuring the social costs of climate change, and the role of critical minerals in a decarbonizing world. Students gain experience in linking theory to real-world policy problems, particularly through a team-based electricity market simulation that mirrors decision-making by market participants. Expectations and evaluation criteria differ for students taking graduate version; consult syllabus or instructor for specific details. Limited to 65.
Faculty: C. Knittel
TTh 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
15.038
14.444
Energy Economics and Policy
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Energy Economics and Policy
Spring
12 Cr.
14.444
Spring 2026 | Analyzes business and public policy issues in energy markets and in the environmental markets to which they are closely tied. Examines the economic determinants of industry structure and evolution of competition among firms in these industries. Investigates successful and unsuccessful strategies for entering new markets and competing in existing markets. Industries studied include oil, natural gas, coal, electricity, and transportation. Topics include climate change and environmental policy, the role of speculation in energy markets, the political economy of energy policies, and market power and antitrust. Two team-based simulation games, representing the world oil market and a deregulated electricity market, act to cement the concepts covered in lecture. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 60.
Faculty: C. Knittel, C. Wolfram
TTh 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
15.232
Breakthrough Ventures: Effective Business Models in Frontier Markets
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Breakthrough Ventures: Effective Business Models in Frontier Markets
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H3 Examines how new approaches to operations, revenue, marketing, finance, and strategy enable improved social outcomes in resource-limited settings across Africa, Latin America, and Asia. Draws on system dynamics, design thinking, and strategic analysis. Explores success and failure in attempts to innovate and scale in product and service delivery. Analysis of novel business models draws on case studies, videos, industry reports, research, and guest speakers. Students present their assessments of innovative base-of-the-pyramid enterprises that aim to do more with less. Students who have not taken at least three management or business classes must apply to the instructor for permission to enroll before the first day of class
Faculty: A. Sastry
TTh 1:00 - 2:30 PM
15.268
Choice Points: Thinking about Life and Leadership through Literature (Restricted to Sloan Fellow MBAs)
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Choice Points: Thinking about Life and Leadership through Literature (Restricted to Sloan Fellow MBAs)
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Explores decision making and leadership. Analyzes the dilemmas and decisions characters face in a selection of plays, stories, and films. Provokes reflection on what constitutes effective and moral reasoning in critical moments of both life and leadership. Restricted to Sloan Fellow MBAs.
Faculty: C. Turco
F 10:00 - 12:00 PM
15.270
Ethical Practice: Leading Through Professionalism, Social Responsibility, and System Design
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Ethical Practice: Leading Through Professionalism, Social Responsibility, and System Design
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H4 Introduction to ethics in business, with a focus on business management. Students explore theoretical concepts in business ethics, and cases representing the challenges they will likely face as managers. Opportunity to work with guest faculty as well as business and other professional practitioners. Individual sessions take the form of moderated discussion, with occasional short lectures from instructor.
Faculty: L. Hafrey
MW 1:00 - 2:30 PM
15.308
Leading the Way: Individual and Organizational Strategies for Advancing DE&I
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Leading the Way: Individual and Organizational Strategies for Advancing DE&I
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Introduces and analyzes competing explanations and claims about inequality within US workplaces; reviews evidence regarding the effectiveness of diversity, equity, and inclusion initiatives and policies; and investigates how race, gender, and other identities may affect employees' experience in work organizations. Significant class time is devoted to experiential exercises to develop skills for interacting effectively with diverse others, managing teams and critical conversations, and advocating thoughtfully for change. Weekly assignments include written reflections based on readings and social science research. Restricted to Sloan MBA students.
Faculty: K. Blackburn, E. Kelly
T 4:00PM-7:00PM
15.366
Climate and Energy Ventures
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Climate and Energy Ventures
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Project-based approach to innovation and venture creation in the energy sector and sectors that can mitigate climate change. Explores how innovation and entrepreneurial concepts apply (or do not apply) to the significant opportunities in these industries. Working in teams, students create new ventures specifically for the energy sector or to address climate change. Lectures guide teams through key elements of their projects. 15.390 is recommended as a prerequisite.
Faculty: T. Hynes, F. O'Sullivan, L. Wayman, J. Pless
Th 5:30 PM - 8:00 PM
15.379J
11.529J
Mobility Ventures: Driving Innovation in Transportation Systems
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Mobility Ventures: Driving Innovation in Transportation Systems
Fall
12 Cr.
11.529J
Fall 2024 | Explores technological, behavioral, policy, and systems-wide frameworks for innovation in transportation systems, complemented with case studies across the mobility spectrum, from autonomous vehicles to urban air mobility to last-mile sidewalk robots. Students interact with a series of guest lecturers from CEOs and other business and government executives who are actively reshaping the future of mobility. Interdisciplinary teams of students collaborate to deliver business plans for proposed mobility-focused startups with an emphasis on primary market research. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: J. Zhao, J. Moavenzadeh
M W 11:30 am - 1:00 pm
15.385
Innovating for Impact
Fall
| 6 Cr.
Innovating for Impact
Fall
6 Cr.
Fall 2025 | H1 Provides a structured approach to innovation and entrepreneurship that creates business value while solving social and environmental problems. Covers physical domains of sustainability, e.g., waste, water, food, energy, and mobility, as well as social and human capital domains, such as health and education. Students explore case studies of critical decisions made in the early stages of an enterprise that help determine its impact. Considers perspective and tools applicable to the startup context or to new lines of business in existing enterprises.
Faculty: J. Jay
MW 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
15.389
Global Entrepreneurship Lab
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Global Entrepreneurship Lab
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Experiential study of the climate for innovation and determinants of entrepreneurial success. Students work in teams of four with the top management of a company to address real-world business challenges. Students gain insight as to how companies build, run, and scale a new enterprise. Focuses primarily on scale-ups operating in emerging markets. Restricted to MBA students; all other graduate students by permission of instructor only. *Project must be related to sustainability to be counted as an elective for the certificate.
Faculty: Johnson
TR 2:30-4:00PM
15.399
Entrepreneurship Lab
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Entrepreneurship Lab
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Project-based subject, in which teams of students from MIT and surrounding colleges work with startups on problems of strategic importance to the venture. Provides an introduction to entrepreneurship, and the action learning component allows students to apply their academic knowledge to the problems faced by entrepreneurial firms. Popular sectors include software, hardware, robotics, clean technology, and life sciences. Meets with 15.3991 when offered concurrently. Expectations and evaluation criteria differ for students taking graduate version; consult syllabus or instructor for specific details. *Project must be related to sustainability to be counted as an elective for the certificate.
Faculty: K. Hickey
M 5:30 - 8:30 PM
15.410
Finance Ethics & Regulation
Fall
| 3 Cr.
Finance Ethics & Regulation
Fall
3 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Explores a range of ethical issues and challenges that arise in organizations and financial practice. Provides fundamental theories typically used to evaluate ethical dilemmas and references both real situations and hypothetical examples. Highlights the importance of ethical values and their impact on financial regulation for professional practice. Discusses the various factors that influence ethical behavior, such as family, religious values, personal standards and needs, senior leadership behavior, norms among colleagues, organizational expressed and implicit standards, and broader community values. Restricted to students in the Master of Finance Program.
Faculty: J. Cohen, E. Golding
Th 6:30 - 8:00 PM
15.499
Practice of Finance: Climate and Social Impact Investing
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Practice of Finance: Climate and Social Impact Investing
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Deep dive into social impact investing – an approach intentionally seeking to create financial return and positive social impact that is actively measured. Imparts a solid analytical framework for evaluating the spectrum of social impact investments, including mission related investing. Includes a project which provides practical experience in evaluating an impact enterprise or a public markets ESG strategy. Students gain experience in structuring different types of investments, and critically compare and contrast these investments with traditional mainstream investments, with a view to understanding structural constraints. Designed for students interested in the intersection of finance and social impact. Provides career guidance and networking opportunities.
Faculty: G. Rao
TTh 4:00 - 5:30 PM
15.655
IDS.435
Law, Technology and Public Policy
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Law, Technology and Public Policy
Fall
12 Cr.
IDS.435
Fall 2025 | Examines how law, economics, and technological change shape public policy, and how law can sway technological change; how the legal system responds to environmental, safety, energy, social, and ethical problems; how law and markets interact to influence technological development; and how law can affect wealth distribution, employment, and social justice. Covers energy/climate change; genetic engineering; telecommunications and the role of misinformation; industrial automation; effect of regulation on technological innovation; impacts of antitrust law on innovation and equity; pharmaceuticals; nanotechnology; cost/benefit analysis as a decision tool; public participation in governmental decisions affecting science and technology; corporate influence on technology and welfare; and law and economics as competing paradigms to encourage sustainability. Students taking graduate version explore subject in greater depth.
Faculty: N. Ashford, Caldart
T Th 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM
15.657
11.466
Technology, Globalization & Sustainable Development
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Technology, Globalization & Sustainable Development
Fall
12 Cr.
11.466
Fall 2025 | Investigates sustainable development, taking a broad view to include not only a healthy economic base, but also a sound environment, stable and rewarding employment, adequate purchasing power and earning capacity, distributional equity, national self-reliance, and maintenance of cultural integrity. Explores national, multinational, and international political and legal mechanisms to further sustainable development through transformation of the industrial state. Addresses the importance of technological innovation and the financial crisis of 2008 and the emergence of the Covid-19 pandemic, Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and inflation, as well as governmental interventions to reduce inequality.
Faculty: N. Ashford
W 4:00 PM - 6:30 PM
15.662
11.383
People and Profits: Shaping the Future of Work
Spring
| 12 Cr.
People and Profits: Shaping the Future of Work
Spring
12 Cr.
11.383
Spring 2025 | Examines managing work in the 21st century in the interests of both people and profits through the context of rising inequality, technological change, globalization, and the growth of the gig economy. Students evaluate various business and policy interventions intended to improve work through critical analysis of the evidence, interviews with workers and evaluations of firms, and guest speakers. Guests include business leaders at leading-edge firms and labor leaders experimenting with new ways of providing workers a voice in the workplace. Draws on materials from the MIT Task Force on Work of the Future and the online course Shaping Work of the Future
Faculty: A. Stansbury
TTh 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM
15.663
1.811
Environmental Law, Policy, and Economics: Pollution Prevention and Control
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Environmental Law, Policy, and Economics: Pollution Prevention and Control
Spring
12 Cr.
1.811
Spring 2026 |Analyzes federal and state regulation of air and water pollution, hazardous waste, greenhouse gas emissions, and production/use of toxic chemicals. Analyzes pollution/climate change as economic problems and failure of markets. Explores the role of science and economics in legal decisions. Emphasizes use of legal mechanisms and alternative approaches (i.e., economic incentives, voluntary approaches) to control pollution and encourage chemical accident and pollution prevention. Focuses on major federal legislation, underlying administrative system, and common law in analyzing environmental policy, economic consequences, and role of the courts. Discusses classical pollutants and toxic industrial chemicals, greenhouse gas emissions, community right-to-know, and environmental justice. Develops basic legal skills: how to read/understand cases, regulations, and statutes. Students taking graduate version explore the subject in greater depth.
Faculty: N. Ashford, C. Caldart
TTh 3:30 - 5:00 PM
15.671
U-Lab: Transforming Self, Business and Society
Fall
| 6 Cr.
U-Lab: Transforming Self, Business and Society
Fall
6 Cr.
Fall 2025 | H1 Experiential opportunity to practice new leadership skills, such as deep listening, being present (mindfulness), and generative dialogue. In weekly coaching circles, each student has one full session to present their current leadership edge and receive feedback from peer coaches. Includes an additional action learning project.
Faculty: O. Scharmer
Th 5:30 PM - 9:00 PM
15.677
11.427
Labor Markets and Employment Policy
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Labor Markets and Employment Policy
Spring
12 Cr.
11.427
Spring 2026 | Research-based examination of how labor markets work — and how they have evolved over time — through trends such as rising income inequality, technological change, globalization, falling worker power, and the fissuring of the workplace. Through reading and engaging with economics research papers, students use theoretical frameworks and rigorous empirical evidence to analyze public policy interventions in the labor market, including unemployment insurance, minimum wage, unions, family leave, anti-discrimination policies, and workforce development. Preference to graduate and PhD students.
Faculty: A. Stansbury
M 1:00PM-4:00PM
15.679
USA Lab: Bridging the American Divides
Spring
| 9 Cr.
USA Lab: Bridging the American Divides
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2025 | This experiential Action Learning Lab is focused on work, community and culture in rural and urban regions of the United States. The Lab stems from concern about the economic, cultural, social and geographic issues that are tearing at the fabric of America. Students work with dynamic local leaders determined to change the trajectory of their communities. Deep discussions in the classroom combined with field-work in rural regions and urban centers throughout the U.S. aim toward understanding and transcending the American divides.
Faculty: L. Hafrey, C. McDowell
W 2:30 - 5:30 PM
15.679
Work Lab: Building Better Jobs
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Work Lab: Building Better Jobs
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H3 Addresses critical business challenges as organizations navigate the future of work. This course focuses on improving job quality by helping organizations redesign work to improve employee retention, productivity, and well-being while maintaining competitive performance. Student teams will partner with employers and workforce development organizations experimenting with new approaches to real workforce challenges. Through field observation, interviews, and data analysis, students will study how firms are transforming their workforce practices. Sample projects may tackle high turnover, address employee skills gaps, or improve human-technology collaboration.Course catalog description (student facing): Learn the skills to redesign work to improve job quality and competitive advantage. In this hands-on lab, you'll partner directly with innovative firms in New England to tackle real workforce challenges—from reducing turnover to optimizing human-AI collaboration. In addition to classes, there will be site visits and an executive presentation of your plans. Provides opportunities for multi-stakeholder analysis particularly relevant to future operations leaders, consultants, or anyone building people-focused businesses.
Faculty: B. Armstrong, L. Hafrey, C. McDowell
W 2:30 PM - 5:30 PM
15.700
Leadership and Integrative Management (Restricted to EMBA, 1st year)
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Leadership and Integrative Management (Restricted to EMBA, 1st year)
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Investigates the different perspectives a general manager must take, how to integrate those perspectives, and the role of leadership in setting and realizing goals. Students work intensively in teams and with multiple faculty, using a deep dive into the challenges faced by a major global firm operating in complex global markets. Restricted to Executive MBA students.
Faculty: D. Ancona, E. Kelly, G. Perakis, N. Repenning, H. Samel, J. Sterman, A. Verdelhan
15.723
Advanced Applied Macroeconomics and International Institutions (Restricted to EMBA, 2nd Year)
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Advanced Applied Macroeconomics and International Institutions (Restricted to EMBA, 2nd Year)
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Topics draw on current macroeconomic issues and events, such as modern monetary and fiscal policy; financial crisis, contagion, and currency crisis; real exchange rates, purchasing power parity, and long run sustainability; sustainable development; targeting and the new monetary policy regime; and Europe and the Euro: optimal currency areas. Restricted to Executive MBA students.
Faculty: R. Rigobon
Th 7:30 PM - 9:30 PM
15.736
Intro to System Dynamics (Restricted to EMBA)
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Intro to System Dynamics (Restricted to EMBA)
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Introduces system dynamics modeling for the analysis of business policy and strategy. Provides the skills to visualize an organization in terms of the structures and policies that create dynamics and regulate performance. Uses causal mapping, simulation models, case studies, and management flight simulators to help develop principles of policy design for successful management of complex strategies. Considers the use of systems thinking to promote effective organizational learning. Restricted to Executive MBA students.
Faculty: N. Repenning
15.737
Advanced System Dynamics (Restricted to EMBA Students and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
| 3 Cr.
Advanced System Dynamics (Restricted to EMBA Students and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
3 Cr.
IAP 2025 | Workshops focus on two models: the dynamics of service quality within a firm; and industry dynamics (particularly investment cycles and bubbles), including the energy and housing markets. Emphasis on formulation, analysis, use, and decision-making. Develops modeling skills.
Faculty: R. Nachtrieb, J. Sterman
15.765
1.265
Global Supply Chain Management
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Global Supply Chain Management
Spring
6 Cr.
1.265
Spring 2026 | H3 Focuses on the planning, processes, and activities of supply chain management for companies involved in international commerce. Students examine the end-to-end processes and operational challenges in managing global supply chains, such as the basics of global trade, international transportation, duty, taxes, trade finance and hedging, currency issues, outsourcing, cultural differences, risks and security, and green supply chains issues. Highly interactive format features student-led discussions, staged debates, and a mock trial. Includes assignments on case studies and sourcing analysis, as well as projects and a final exam.
Faculty: S. Willems
TTh 1:00 - 2:30 PM
15.768
Management of Services: Concepts, Design, & Delivery
Fall
| 9 Cr.
Management of Services: Concepts, Design, & Delivery
Fall
9 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Focuses on how companies can use operational principles to create value for customers, employees, and investors simultaneously. Case-based subject that emphasizes systems perspective and leadership in operations versus the use of specific analytical tools (e.g., queuing theory, inventory management, process analysis) that were covered in the pre- or co-requisite. Cases include a range of service operations contexts including healthcare, hospitality, retailing, food service, pest control, and financial services.
Faculty: Z. Ton
MW 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM or MW 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
15.769
Operations Strategy
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Operations Strategy
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Provides a unifying framework for analyzing strategic decisions in manufacturing and service operations. Covers decisions in technology, facilities, vertical integration, human resources, sourcing, supply chain, and other strategic areas. Examines how decisions in these areas can be made to align with business strategy, and emphasizes the concept of operations as a source of competitive advantage. Discusses operations strategy within the firm, across the supply chain, and for growth and new business models.
Faculty: K. Zheng
Multiple. TTh 8:30 AM - 10:00 AM OR 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM
15.783
2.739
Product Design & Development
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Product Design & Development
Spring
12 Cr.
2.739
Spring 2026 |Covers modern tools and methods for product design and development. Includes a cornerstone project in which teams conceive, design and prototype a physical product and/or service. Covers human-centered design, agile development, product planning, identifying customer needs, concept generation, product architecture, industrial design, concept design, green design methods, and product management. Sloan students register via Sloan course bidding. Engineering students accepted via lottery based on WebSIS pre-registration.
Faculty: S. Eppinger
TTh 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
15.871
Introduction to System Dynamics
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Introduction to System Dynamics
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H3 Introduction to systems thinking and system dynamics modeling applied to strategy, organizational change, and policy design. Students use simulation models, management flight simulators, and case studies to develop conceptual and modeling skills for the design and management of high-performance organizations in a dynamic world. Case studies of successful applications of system dynamics in growth strategy, management of technology, operations, public policy, product development, and others. Principles for effective use of modeling in the real world. Meets with 15.873 first half of term when offered concurrently. Students taking 15.871 complete additional assignments.
Sustainability Certificate Requirement
Faculty: V. Yang, H. Rahmandad
Multiple times offered.MW10:00 AM - 11:30 AM OR 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
15.873
System Dynamics for Business and Policy
Spring
| 9 Cr.
System Dynamics for Business and Policy
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Focuses on developing the skills and tools needed to successfully apply systems thinking and simulation modeling in diverse real-world settings, including growth strategy, management of technology, operations, public policy, product development, supply chains, forecasting, project management, process improvement, service operations, and platform-based businesses, among others. Uses simulation models, management flight simulators, and case studies to deepen conceptual and modeling skills beyond what is introduced in 15.871. Exploring case studies of successful applications, students develop proficiency in how to use qualitative and quantitative data to formulate and test models, and how to work effectively with senior executives to successfully implement change. Prepares students for further work in the field. Meets with 15.871 in first half of term when offered concurrently. Students taking 15.871 complete additional assignments.
Counts towards Sustainability Certificate requirements
Faculty: V. Yang
Multiple times offered. MW 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM OR 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
15.874
12.387
Environmental Governance and Science
Fall
| 9 Cr.
Environmental Governance and Science
Fall
9 Cr.
12.387
Fall 2024 | Introduces governance and science aspects of complex environmental problems and approaches to solutions. Introduces quantitative analyses and methodological tools to analyze environmental issues that have human and natural components. Demonstrates concepts through a series of in-depth case studies of environmental governance and science problems.
Faculty: A. Siddiqi
F 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
15.878
Sustainable Business Lab (S-Lab)
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Sustainable Business Lab (S-Lab)
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Integrative experience that explores the complex set of circumstances and choices leaders must face in light of uncertain environmental and social consequences. Drawing on academic and practical experiences, students engage in a semester-long project focused on a host organization's sustainability challenge. Peer-to-peer learning accompanies in-class cases, simulations, and role-playing to provide students with practical skills for application in projects and for careers beyond. A shared deep dive into a systemic challenge provides a chance for students across programs to reflect and engage in dialogue about the ethical landscape of business. Through personal reflection and career visioning, students clarify their own personal commitments to leadership and change.
Sustainability Certificate requirement | Co-req:15.915: Business Strategies for a Sustainable Future
Faculty: B. Patten
W 4:00 - 6:00 PM
15.910
Innovation Strategy
Fall
| 6 Cr.
Innovation Strategy
Fall
6 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Establishes a foundation for formulating, analyzing, and executing strategies to develop and commercialize new products and services in technology-intensive industries. Develops and applies rigorous frameworks to examine the interaction between patterns of technological change, market dynamics, and the development of internal firm capabilities. Topics include profiting from innovation, the role of intellectual property, platform strategy, government regulation, and innovation policy. Applies concepts in various industry and case settings with an emphasis on addressing issues most relevant for today's changing economic landscape and fostering innovation for social progress, such as clean energy, environmental management, healthcare, and digitalization.
Faculty: J. Pless
MW 1:00 pm - 2:30 pm
15.915
Business Strategies for a Sustainable Future
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Business Strategies for a Sustainable Future
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Develops a pragmatic, action-oriented approach to sustainability: the alignment between healthy businesses, healthy environments, healthy societies, and an economy that meets human needs. In-class simulations and role-playing provide a robust foundation for understanding sustainability challenges. Cases analyze innovative strategies for sustainable businesses and organizations. Class discussions explore how sustainability is changing existing business models and market structures, how to develop sustainable management practices, and how firms can implement those practices successfully.
Sustainability Certificate requirement | Required for 15.878: Sustainable Business Lab (S-Lab), can be taken concurrently.
Faculty: J. Jay
Multiple. TTh 10:00 - 11:30 AM OR 4:00 - 5:30 PM
15.S05
SSIM: Energy Management and AI: Strategies for a Sustainable Future
Spring
| 9 Cr.
SSIM: Energy Management and AI: Strategies for a Sustainable Future
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H3 15.S05 explores Consumer-centric Energy and Climate Innovations; such as technologies and services that strategically enhance building efficiency and electrification; incorporate site solar, battery storage, and electric vehicles; and are enabled to integrate with today's increasingly renewable electric grids. Such innovations provide a foundation for a New Era for Energy Management.With enabling support from the instructors, materials, and assignments, class members examine emerging New Era of Energy Management technology, analytic, business, and policy innovations:
Faculty: H. Michaels
TTh 1:00 - 2:30 PM
15.S09
SSIM: Optimization of Energy Systems
Fall
| 12 Cr.
SSIM: Optimization of Energy Systems
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2024 | The course will first introduce the big picture of energy system transition, then go into details of the key decision-making problems in electric power systems, and study the couplings between power and other infrastructure systems, and finally assess energy system transition in an integrated fashion. This course aims to lead PhD or advanced master students to the forefront of energy system research.
Faculty: A. Sun
MW 2:30 pm - 4:00 pm
15.S13
SSIM: Identifying Opportunities in Climate Tech
Spring
| 6 Cr.
SSIM: Identifying Opportunities in Climate Tech
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H4 Opportunity for group study by graduate students on current topics related to management not otherwise included in curriculum.
Faculty: B. Soltoff
T 2:30 PM - 5:00 PM
15.S21
SSIM: Building and Using Imagined Futures: Thinking Forward in a Post-Global World (Restricted to MIT Sloan Fellows, EMBA Students, and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
| 3 Cr.
SSIM: Building and Using Imagined Futures: Thinking Forward in a Post-Global World (Restricted to MIT Sloan Fellows, EMBA Students, and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
3 Cr.
IAP 2025 | Group study of current topics related to management not otherwise included in curriculum.
Faculty: H. Samel
15.S22
SSIM: Pursuing Happiness and a Meaningful Life
Spring
| 6 Cr.
SSIM: Pursuing Happiness and a Meaningful Life
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H4 The two main objectives of this course are 1) to understand the psychodynamics and other factors in the empirical research on happiness and 2) to develop the skills and habits to enhance the student’s own happiness. Albert Schweitzer once said, “Success is not the key to happiness. Happiness is the key to success.” In this course, students will read some of the most relevant research on the topic and self-administer surveys that will enable them to understand their own happiness. In-class activities and weekly assignments will allow students to practice the intentional pursuit of happiness. Who should take this course: This course is open to Sloan Fellows and second-year MBA students. It will be limited to 32 students to encourage more personal and group discussion. This course is appropriate for anyone who is interested in personal growth as part of leadership development. Students will discuss personal experiences, survey results, and reflect -- individually and in small groups. Instructors and students will form a supportive environment for sharing professional and personal goals. Please join only if you are prepared to be fully engaged in introspective exercises in order to understand and possibly change your existing
Faculty: S. Neal, R. Pozen
T 4:00 PM - 5:30 PM
15.S24
SSIM: Leading With Impact - A Social Impact Lab
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
| 6 Cr.
SSIM: Leading With Impact - A Social Impact Lab
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
6 Cr.
IAP 2026 | In this course students will explore the intersection of business frameworks with social impact, using a consultative action-learning approach to move the needle on real-world challenges.
Faculty: B. Scott Akinc
MTW 9:00 AM - 4:00 PM
15.S56
SSIM: Sustainability Investment, Measurement, and Impact (IAP)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
| 3 Cr.
SSIM: Sustainability Investment, Measurement, and Impact (IAP)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
3 Cr.
IAP 2026 | Firms, investors, and regulators increasingly rely on ESG data. But how can we effectively measure the ESG performance of firms? And how can we effectively use this information for strategic decision making? This two-day course helps managers, investors, and anyone working with ESG data to understand how those measure are constructed, what their pitfalls are, and how they can be used in strategic decision making. Students of this class will learn how firms report on ESG metrics, how ESG ratings are built, and how investors use them. The program makes use of case studies and worked examples. It also builds on the findings of MIT’s Aggregate Confusion Project.
Faculty: F. Berg, R. Verdi
15.S62
SSIM: Management of Services (Restricted to MIT Sloan Fellows, EMBA Students, and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
| 3 Cr.
SSIM: Management of Services (Restricted to MIT Sloan Fellows, EMBA Students, and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
3 Cr.
IAP 2025 | Group study of current topics related to management not otherwise included in curriculum.
Faculty: Z. Ton
15.S65
SSIM: Smarter Together…But How: Leveraging DEI to Amplify Opportunities (Restricted to MIT Sloan Fellows, EMBA Students, and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
| 3 Cr.
SSIM: Smarter Together…But How: Leveraging DEI to Amplify Opportunities (Restricted to MIT Sloan Fellows, EMBA Students, and Alumni)
IAP
Independent activities period is four weeks in January for independent study.
3 Cr.
IAP 2025 | Group study of current topics related to management not otherwise included in curriculum.
Faculty: B. Thomas
15.S70
Impact Ventures: A Practical Perspective for Entrepreneurial Leaders Moving Ideas to Impact in the Developing World
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Impact Ventures: A Practical Perspective for Entrepreneurial Leaders Moving Ideas to Impact in the Developing World
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2024 | A practical perspective - must be an effort linked to sustainability. (Only available to Legatum Fellows)
Faculty: L. Lamb, D. Sherif
M 5:30 - 8:00 PM
16.S898
Climate Action: Leadership and Problem Solving in Complex Systems
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Climate Action: Leadership and Problem Solving in Complex Systems
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | In this course, students study climate change while gaining a foundation in leadership: the practice of mobilizing people – from any organizational position, with or without authority, and across boundaries – to take on tough realities that demand change. This course integrates theory with practice: By grappling with the uncertainty, loss, and conflict that arise organically in the context of climate change, students gain first-hand experience with the dynamics of problem-solving in complex systems. In particular, students not only explore the social, political, and economic dimensions of climate change, but they also learn diagnostic tools such as stakeholder mapping and group dynamics, as well as action strategies for managing ambiguity, inspiring action, and cultivating shared responsibility. Students also explore what it takes on a personal level to manage the tumult of leadership.
Faculty: B. Leshchinskiy
2.760
Global Engineering: Green Machines
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Global Engineering: Green Machines
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Combines rigorous engineering theory and user-centered product design to create and disseminate green technologies for global markets. Instruction focused on analyzing barriers to large-scale adoption of green technologies and utilizing engineering skills to promote greater adoption. Students engage in physics-based machine design theory and experiments to parametrically analyze green technologies, coupled with product design principles to understand policy, cultural, market-driven, and economic factors. Includes guest lectures, case studies, and a term-long project to create a techno-economic analysis on a green technology. Instruction and practice in oral and written communication provided. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: A. Winter
MW 11:30 AM - 1:00 PM
2.77
FUNdaMENTALS of Precision Product Design
Fall
| 12 Cr.
FUNdaMENTALS of Precision Product Design
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Examines design, selection, and combination of machine elements to produce a robust precision system. Introduces process, philosophy and physics-based principles of design to improve/enable renewable power generation, energy efficiency, and manufacturing productivity. Topics include linkages, power transmission, screws and gears, actuators, structures, joints, bearings, error apportionment, and error budgeting. Considers each topic with respect to its physics of operation, mechanics (strength, deformation, thermal effects) and accuracy, repeatability, and resolution. Includes guest lectures from practicing industry and academic leaders. Students design, build, and test a small benchtop precision machine, such as a heliostat for positioning solar PV panels or a two or three axis machine. Prior to each lecture, students review the pre-recorded detailed topic materials and then converge on what parts of the topic they want covered in extra depth in lecture. Students are assessed on their preparation for and participation in class sessions. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Enrollment limited.
Faculty: A. Slocum
T Th 3:30 PM - 5:00 PM
2.832
Solving for Carbon Neutrality at MIT
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Solving for Carbon Neutrality at MIT
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2025 | Working in teams, students address the problem of reducing MIT's greenhouse gas emissions in a manner consistent with the climate goals of maintaining our planet in a suitable regime to support human society and the environment.
Faculty: T. Gutowski, J. Newman
MW 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
22.780
1.878
Nuclear Waste Management
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Nuclear Waste Management
Fall
12 Cr.
1.878
Fall 2024 | Introduces the essential knowledge for understanding nuclear waste management. Includes material flow sheets for nuclear fuel cycle, waste characteristics, sources of radioactive wastes, compositions, radioactivity and heat generation, chemical processing technologies, geochemistry, waste disposal technologies, environmental regulations and the safety assessment of waste disposal. Covers different types of wastes: uranium mining waste, low-level radioactive waste, high-level radioactive waste and fusion waste. Provides the quantitative methods to compare the environmental impact of different nuclear and other energy-associated waste. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: C. Forsberg
MW 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
24.634
Global Justice, Gender, and Development
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Global Justice, Gender, and Development
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Addresses challenges in working towards global justice including poverty, food and water insecurity, healthcare disparities, human rights violations, violence and dislocation, and environmental risk. Focuses on gender and identity, locating the root causes of inequality within cultural, political and economic contexts. Designed to give a framework to understand gender dynamics. Teaches how to integrate gender sensitive strategies into development work. Classes, readings, and final projects illustrate how design and implementation of international development strategies can provide capacity building and income generation opportunities. Meets with EC.798 when offered concurrently. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 20 total for versions meeting together.
Faculty: S. Haslanger, L. McDonald
W 9:30 AM - 12:30 PM
3.088
EC.988
Social Life of Materials
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Social Life of Materials
Spring
12 Cr.
EC.988
Spring 2025 | Students carry out projects on a material of their choice and study its technical, humanistic, and environmental origins and trajectories of development through historical methods; evaluate its current status within a social and humanistic context; and then imagine and evaluate potential futures. Projects supported by topics and scholarship in sociotechnical systems, social innovation, environmental history and justice, equity-based human-centered design, and futures literacy. Students taking the graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: C. Ortiz, E. Spero, J. Cohen
MW 12:00 – 1:30 PM
3.372
Lightweighting and Structural Optimization
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Lightweighting and Structural Optimization
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Presents modern processes, technologies, and methods used to develop lighter vehicular structures critical to reducing greenhouse gas emissions and lowering costs. Explores how materials design, solid mechanics, mechanical engineering, manufacturing technologies, joining technologies, and numerical optimization are all brought to task to effect real-world lightweighting of both primary and secondary vehicle structures. Additionally, since important lessons are in past designs, the evolution of lightweight design in aerospace, automotive, and bicycles are presented and defining aspects from milestone designs are critically assessed. Students taking graduate version submit additional work.
Faculty: D. Baskin
TWF 9:00 AM
3.560
3.081
Industrial Ecology of Materials
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Industrial Ecology of Materials
Fall
12 Cr.
3.081
Fall 2025 | Covers quantitative techniques to address principles of substitution, dematerialization, and waste mining implementation in materials systems. Includes life-cycle and materials flow analysis of the impacts of materials extraction; processing; use; and recycling for materials, products, and services. Student teams undertake a case study regarding materials and technology selection using the latest methods of analysis and computer-based models of materials process. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: J. Gregory, K. Daehn, A. Arowosola
4.227
Landscapes of Energy
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Landscapes of Energy
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2025 | Spatializes large technological systems of energy, analyzes existing and speculative energy visions, and imagines energy futures in relation to concerns of ecology, politics, and aesthetics. Identifies different scales of thinking about the territory of energy from that of environmental systems, to cities, regions, and global landscapes. Readings and students' research projects draw on critical geography, history of technology, environmental history to synthesize energy attributes within the design disciplines. Limited to 10.
Faculty: R. Ghosn
W 2:00PM - 5:00PM
4.228
11.348
Contemporary Urbanism Proseminar: Theory and Representation
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Contemporary Urbanism Proseminar: Theory and Representation
Fall
12 Cr.
11.348
Fall 2025 |Critical introduction to key contemporary positions in urbanism to the ends of researching, representing, and designing territories that respond to the challenges of the 21st century. Provides an overview of contemporary urban issues, situates them in relation to a genealogy of urban precedents, and constructs a theoretical framework that engages the allied fields of architecture, landscape architecture, political ecology, geography, territorial planning, and environmental humanities. Comprised of three sections, first section articulates a framework on the urban as both process and form, shifting the emphasis from city to territory. Second section engages a series of related urban debates, such as density/sprawl, growth/shrinkage, and codes/exception. Third section calls upon urban agency in the age of environment through the object of infrastructures of trash, water, oil, and food. Limited to 25.
Faculty: R. Ghosn
W 2:00 - 5:00 pm
4.255
11.304
Site and Environmental Systems Planning -- New Orleans Studio Practicum: Designing Neighborhood Futures in a Changing Climate
Spring
| 15 Cr.
Site and Environmental Systems Planning -- New Orleans Studio Practicum: Designing Neighborhood Futures in a Changing Climate
Spring
15 Cr.
11.304
Spring 2026 | Introduces a range of practical approaches involved in evaluating and planning sites within the context of natural and cultural systems. Develops the knowledge and skills to analyze and plan a site for development through exercises and an urban design project. Topics include land inventory, urban form, spatial organization of uses, parcelization, design of roadways, grading, utility systems, off-site impacts, and landscape strategies.
Faculty: E. Ben-Joseph, M. Ocampo
W 4:00 PM - 6:00 PM, F 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM
4.329
Climate Visions
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Climate Visions
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Presents artistic intelligence and modes of creative production as ways to contribute to and critically engage with climate science. In conversation with local stakeholders, students develop hybrid projects of art and design that negotiate between pragmatics and fiction to envision solutions to the climate crisis. Case studies and class participation examine dialectics between aesthetics and scientific knowledge related to environmental care and repair. Includes prototyping and publishing spatial, digital, and material experimentations to generate new work individually and/or collaboratively by way of diverse media explorations. Visiting speakers and field trips accompany lectures, readings, class discussions, and presentations. Additional work required of students taking the graduate version. Lab fee required. Limited to 12.
Faculty: Consult G. Urbonas
MW 9:30 am - 12:30 pm
4.443
Modeling Urban Energy Flows for Sustainable Cities and Neighborhoods
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Modeling Urban Energy Flows for Sustainable Cities and Neighborhoods
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Studies energy flows in and around groups of buildings from individual buildings to complete large-scale neighborhoods. Students use emerging digital techniques to analyze and influence building design interventions in relation to energy use for construction (embodied energy) and operation, access to daylight, and assessing walkability and outdoor comfort at the neighborhood scale. Additional work required of students taking the graduate version.
Faculty: C. Reinhart
TTh 9:30 AM - 11:00 AM
4.464
1.564
Environmental Technologies in Buildings
Fall
| 9 Cr.
Environmental Technologies in Buildings
Fall
9 Cr.
1.564
Fall 2025 | Introduction to the study of the thermal and luminous behavior of buildings. Examines the basic scientific principles underlying these phenomena and introduces students to a range of technologies and analysis techniques for designing comfortable indoor environments. Challenges students to apply these techniques and explore the role energy and light can play in shaping architecture. Additional work required of students taking the graduate version.
Faculty: C. Reinhart
MW 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
4.481
Building Technology Seminar
Fall
| 3 Cr.
Building Technology Seminar
Fall
3 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Fundamental research methodologies and ongoing investigations in building tehnology to support the development of student research projects. Topics drawn from low energy building design and thermal comfort, building systems analysis and control, daylighting, structural design and analysis, novel building materials and construction techniques and resource dynamics. Organized as a series of two- and three-week sessions that consider topics through readings, discussions, design and analysis projects, and student presentations.
Faculty: Consult L. R. Glicksman, C. Mueller, C. Reinhart, L. K. Norford, J. Ochsendorf
Th 3:00 - 5:00 PM
4.624
Dwelling & Building: Cities in the Global South
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Dwelling & Building: Cities in the Global South
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Examines the contemporary challenges and history of city planning on three continents - Africa, Asia, and South America. Students study a number of city plans, from the 'informal' settlements of Delhi and Nairobi, the modernist master plans of Brasilia and Baghdad, to climate action plans in various cities. Explores the relationship between dwelling and building in the design of cities, in conjunction with the environmental, social, political, and intellectual environments at the time of their planning. Open to both undergraduate and graduate students.
Faculty: H. Gupta
T 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
4.656
Environmental Histories of Architecture
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Environmental Histories of Architecture
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Drawing on case studies from the ancient world to the present day, considers how the creation of architecture has involved the modification of natural environments and climates and the exploitation of resources across the globe. Investigates the metabolic processes of raw material extraction, transportation, and manipulation that make the creation of buildings, infrastructures, and designed landscapes possible. Explores how material and climatic considerations have played into the design and aesthetics of buildings at various points in time and promotes an awareness of the largely invisible, increasingly far-flung networks of environmental management and labor that underpin our built environment. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 25 for versions meeting together; preference to undergraduates.
Faculty: H. Gupta, C. Murphy
TTh 12:30 PM - 2:00 PM
4.S22
Change a System, Change the World
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Change a System, Change the World
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | This course explores the difference between innovation, social innovation, and systems change for social impact. Students interested in navigating complex environmental and social problems will explore frameworks and case studies from real systems change innovators to develop a more comprehensive view of complex problems and the systems they are part of —systems that often keep those problems in place. In the course, you will apply experiential tools and methods to interrogate your own call to action, strengths, and gaps to address complex problems or needs. You will gain an understanding of the importance of understanding problems from the impact target’s perspective and explore innovative ways to create a scalable movement that ultimately can change a system. The final deliverable from the course is writing a case study on system change based on detailed actor mapping and interviews where you share your deeper understanding of a system you care about.
Faculty: Yscaira Jimenez, Svafa Grönfeldt and Jenny Larios Berlin
T 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM
4.S32
Special Subject: Art, Culture and Technology — Art and Agriculture: Coops and Commons
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Special Subject: Art, Culture and Technology — Art and Agriculture: Coops and Commons
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | This hands-on studio explores the intersections of art, design, governance, and urban agriculture through the collaborative construction of two site-specific chicken coops—one for Common Good Farm and one for Eastie Farms—based on an open-source artist-designed framework. Cross listed and co-taught with Justin Blazier (Architecture) and Kate Brown (STS), the course connects critical histories of urban farming in Boston and Cambridge with practical skills in community-responsive design and fabrication. Students work directly with local farms and gardens to understand ecological, social, and political contexts, develop artistic, adaptive design proposals, and collectively build functional structures that examine how food systems, civic infrastructures, and public space shape one another.
Faculty: N. Sinnokrot
W 2:00 PM - 5:00 PM
5.82
10.582
Principles of Innovation
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Principles of Innovation
Spring
6 Cr.
10.582
Spring 2025 | H4 Presents the key elements required for new technical ideas and business practices to be successfully deployed in an open economy, subject to international trade and external environmental costs. Examines the challenges of climate change and increased international competitiveness as they relate to innovation. Offers recommendations for major policy changes to how innovation is encouraged in the United States and the global economy. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: J. Deutch
TF 9:30 - 11:00 AM
6.7121
6.7120
Principles of Modeling, Computing and Control for Decarbonized Electric Energy Systems
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Principles of Modeling, Computing and Control for Decarbonized Electric Energy Systems
Fall
12 Cr.
6.7120
Fall 2024 | Introduces fundamentals of electric energy systems as complex dynamical network systems. Topics include coordinated and distributed modeling and control methods for efficient and reliable power generation, delivery, and consumption; data-enabled algorithms for integrating clean intermittent resources, storage, and flexible demand, including electric vehicles; examples of network congestion management, frequency, and voltage control in electrical grids at various scales; and design and operation of supporting markets. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
MW 10:30 AM - 12:00 PM
CMS.875
Reading Climate Through Media
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Reading Climate Through Media
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Explores how climate is construed in the contemporary media in order to gain a better understanding of how views of climate change are shaped and received in the public sphere.
Faculty: K. Tarker
T 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM
EC.782
Applications of Energy in Global Development
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Applications of Energy in Global Development
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Engages students in project-based learning in collaboration with D-Lab community partners to improve access to affordable, reliable, sustainable, and modern energy for all. Teams work on off-grid energy projects addressing challenges in lighting, cooking, agricultural productivity, or other areas in collaboration with D-Lab community partners in developing countries. Project work includes assessment of user needs, technology identification, product design, prototyping, and development of implementation strategies to continue progress of ongoing projects. Optional IAP field visits may be available to test and implement the solutions developed during the semester. Students enrolled in the graduate version complete additional assignments. Limited to 20; preference to students who have taken EC.791.
Faculty: E. Verploegen
T Th 3:00 PM - 5:00 PM
EC.786
Thermal Energy Networks
Spring
| 9 Cr.
Thermal Energy Networks
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Thermal Energy Networks (TENs) use ambient-temperature water to transfer thermal energy between sources and sinks—a highly efficient system for building decarbonization. Subject offers technical lectures based on professional trainings. Topics covered include: HVAC, heat pumps, geo-exchange, ambient loops, thermal energy storage, waste energy recovery, techno-economic analysis, policy, industry standards, case studies, thermal systems modeling, and networks. Class is project-based and transdisciplinary. Students undertake a feasibility/test-fit study of a potential TEN at a local site, gaining first-hand knowledge of how to decarbonize clusters of buildings. Graduate version requires additional work. Enrollment limited to 20.
Faculty: S. Murcott
EC.789
D-Lab: Water, Climate Change and Planetary Health
Spring
| 12 Cr.
D-Lab: Water, Climate Change and Planetary Health
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Examines the current state and future projections of climate change and its effects on human, ecosystem, and planetary health, and develops solutions for these challenges. Class is project-based, student-focused, experiential, and transdisciplinary. Emphasizes nature- and community-based solutions, both local and global, with a focus on environmental and climate justice. Participation and teamwork are fundamental, as are experiential activities such as field trips to zero-carbon buildings and to sites undergoing rapid transformation. Working individually or in teams, students develop a term project on a climate change or planetary health solution of Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: S. Murcott
Th 12:00 PM - 3:00 PM
EC.791
Introduction to Energy in Global Development
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Introduction to Energy in Global Development
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Surveys energy technologies including solar, wind, and hydro power; cooking; indoor heating; irrigation; and agricultural productivity through an international development context to impart energy literacy and common-sense applications. Focuses on compact, robust, low-cost systems for meeting the needs of household and small business. Provides an overview of identifying user needs, assessing the suitability of specific technologies, and strategies for implementation in developing countries. Labs reinforce lecture material through activities including system assembly and testing. Team projects involve activities including connecting with pre-selected community partners, product design and analysis, and continuing the development of ongoing projects. Optional summer fieldwork may be available. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments. Enrollment limited by lottery; must attend first class session.
Faculty: J. Maldonado
MWF 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
EC.988
IDS.588
The Social Life of Materials: Sociotechnical and Policy Futures
Spring
| 12 Cr.
The Social Life of Materials: Sociotechnical and Policy Futures
Spring
12 Cr.
IDS.588
Spring 2026 | Students carry out projects on a material of their choice and study its technical, humanistic, and environmental origins and trajectories of development through historical methods; evaluate its current status within a social and humanistic context; and then imagine and evaluate potential futures. Projects supported by topics and scholarship in sociotechnical systems, social innovation, environmental history and justice, equity-based human-centered design, and futures literacy. Students taking the graduate version complete additional assignments.
Faculty: C. Ortiz, E. Spero
MW 12:00 - 1:30 PM
IDS.521
1.670
Energy Systems for Climate Change Mitigation
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Energy Systems for Climate Change Mitigation
Fall
12 Cr.
1.670
Fall2025| Reviews the contributions of energy systems to global greenhouse gas emissions, and the levers for reducing those emissions. Lectures and projects focus on evaluating energy systems against climate policy goals, using performance metrics such as cost, carbon intensity, and others. Student projects explore pathways for realizing emissions reduction scenarios. Projects address the climate change mitigation potential of energy technologies (hardware and software), technological and behavioral change trajectories, and technology and policy portfolios. Background in energy systems strongly recommended. Students taking the graduate version explore the subject in greater depth.
Faculty: J. Trancik
T Th 11:00 AM - 12:30 PM
IDS.522
Mapping and Evaluating New Energy Technologies
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Mapping and Evaluating New Energy Technologies
Fall
12 Cr.
Fall 2025 | Project-based seminar reviews recent developments in energy conversion and storage technologies. Merits of alternative technologies are debated based on their environmental performance and cost, and their potential improvement and scalability. Project teams develop qualitative insights, quantitative models, and interactive visualization tools to inform the future development of technologies. Models may probe how the impact of a technology depends on assumptions about future advancements in performance, and how quantitative performance targets can be estimated to inform investment and design decisions. Other projects may develop models to inform rational investments in a portfolio of technologies based on economic and environmental performance and scalability constraints. Both information-based (e.g., software and codified practices) and physical technologies will be discussed.
Faculty: J. Trancik
W 2:30 PM - 5:30 PM
MAS.664
AI for Impact: Solving Societal-Scale Problems
Spring
| 9 Cr.
AI for Impact: Solving Societal-Scale Problems
Spring
9 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Examines internal and external entrepreneurship driven by artificial intelligence (AI) technologies, aiming to utilize digital innovations that lead to societal change. Probes a range of AI-generated business models and opportunities, exploring challenges in key sectors such as digital health, sustainability, fintech, and the decentralization of society and commerce by developing sustainable and economically viable solutions. Content includes blockchain, privacy technology, data markets, and AI advancements like Web3 and distributed machine learning. Cases illustrate examples of both successful and failed businesses, as well as difficulties in deploying and diffusing products. Guest speakers provide real-world insights into entrepreneurship. As a final project, students work in teams to develop a business plan executive summary for one of the featured technologies. Enrollment is limited; please see subject website for details.
Faculty: R. Raskar, P. Agrawal, S. Karaman
Th 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM
MAS.665
IDS.865
Foundations of AI Ventures
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Foundations of AI Ventures
Fall
12 Cr.
IDS.865
Fall 2025 | Seminar focuses on developing and building entrepreneurial ventures to drive global positive impact. Students tackle challenges in the broad sectors of digital health, sustainability, fintech, and the decentralization of society and commerce by developing enduring and economically viable solutions. Topics include blockchain, privacy-tech, data markets, and AI technologies such as Web3 and Distributed Machine Learning. Guest speakers and case studies reveal successes and failures in deploying products and services. Homework explores established and emerging business models, plus opportunities from innovations at MIT and beyond. The final project involves creating an executive summary for a business plan, suitable for submission to the MIT $100K Entrepreneurship Competition's Accelerate Contest or MIT IDEAS. Enrollment is limited; please see subject website for details.
Faculty: R. Raskar
Th 10:00 AM - 12:00 PM
MAS.842
Safeguarding the Future
Spring
| 12 Cr.
Safeguarding the Future
Spring
12 Cr.
Spring 2026 | Leading experts guide discussions of how to safeguard the world against the greatest threats to our future. Topics range from the overt perils of pandemic and nuclear proliferation to the underlying coordination failures responsible for climate change, and from technological stagnation to transformative AI. Draws on the history of invention and science communication to explore which technologies are most likely to shape the future and how inventors and developers can influence outcomes, with the goal of determining how to accomplish as much good as possible. Emphasizes science writing and communication. Students write three op-eds on key issues and participate in a group project aiming to coordinate effective action. Students taking the graduate version complete additional work.
Faculty: K. Esvelt, M. Specter
W 10:00 AM - 1:00 PM
MAS.858
16.857
Asking How Space Enabled Designs Advance Justice and Development
Fall
| 12 Cr.
Asking How Space Enabled Designs Advance Justice and Development
Fall
12 Cr.
16.857
Fall 2024 | Examines theoretical and practical challenges of applying complex technology, such as space systems, to advance justice and development within human society. Proposes and critiques a concept of justice and development based on attainment of the US Sustainable Development Goals. Analyzes text by historians and economists around global patterns of uneven technology access. Teaches systems engineering tools to analyze the context, stakeholders, functions and forms of complex systems that impact society. Presents six space technologies used for specific Sustainable Development Goal. Students read several text, discuss key themes, write reflective responses, and write a research proposal on a topic of their choice. Part of two-class series on space technology and sustainable development. Limited to 15.
Faculty: D. Wood
M 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
MAS.859
16.859
Space Technology for the Development Leader
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Space Technology for the Development Leader
Spring
6 Cr.
16.859
Spring 2026 | Follow on to MAS.858. Introduces intersections between space technology and sustainable development by examining technical, policy and social aspects of seven space technologies: satellite earth observation; satellite communication; satellite positioning; human space flight and micro gravity research; space technology transfer; fundamental scientific space research; and small satellites. Lectures introduce the UN Sustainable Development Goals and show linkages to seven space technologies from the perspective of development practitioners. Students read scholarly papers, write weekly responses, give presentations, and write a research paper.
Faculty: D. Wood
M 9:00 AM - 12:00 PM
SCM.251
Supply Chain Financial Analysis
Fall
| 9 Cr.
Supply Chain Financial Analysis
Fall
9 Cr.
Fall 2025 | H2 Explores the linkages between supply chain management and corporate finance. Emphasizes how the supply chain creates value for both the shareholders of the company and for the stakeholders affected by the company's operations. Sessions combine lectures and data-rich cases from the manufacturer, distributor, and retailer perspective. Topics include accounting fundamentals, financial analysis, activity-based costing, working capital management, cash flow projections, capital budgeting, and sustainability.
Faculty: J. Goentzel, J. Rice
T Th 2:30 PM - 4:00 PM / Recitation: F 10:00 AM - 11:30 AM
SCM.283
Humanitarian Logistics
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Humanitarian Logistics
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H3 Explores how logistics management improves response to humanitarian crises stemming from natural disasters, armed conflicts, epidemics, and famine. Class sessions combine online and class lectures, practical exercises, case discussions, and guest speakers. Provides students from various backgrounds with knowledge of the humanitarian context and fundamental supply chain concepts, as well as practice applying new knowledge in developing and communicating plans and policies to address realistic problems.
Faculty: J. Goentzel
MWTh 1:00 PM - 2:30 PM
SCM.290
Sustainable Supply Chain Management
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Sustainable Supply Chain Management
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2025 | Focuses on analyzing the environmental implications of logistics decisions in the supply chain, with special focus on the effect of green transportation, and the new trends in logistics sustainability within the context of growing urbanization and e-commerce. Studies practical alternatives on how to optimize CO2 emissions during last-mile operations by using geo-spatial analysis, and data analytics. Examines the delivery of "fast" and "green" in the new digital era, consumer relationship to sustainable products and services, and environmental costs of fast-shipping e-commerce. Covers supply chain carbon footprint, sustainable transportation, green vehicle routing, fleet assignment, truck consolidation, closed-loop supply chains, reverse logistics, green inventory management, and green consumer behavior.
Faculty: J. Velazquez
MW 10:00 - 11:30 AM
SCM.291
Procurement Fundamentals
Spring
| 6 Cr.
Procurement Fundamentals
Spring
6 Cr.
Spring 2026 | H4 Introduces key strategies that elevate procurement from a transactional function to a strategic role, enabling participants to make informed decisions that drive supply chain continuity, resilience, and competitiveness. Subject focuses on innovation, particularly the application of artificial intelligence in procurement. Participants explore various use cases of AI in procurement, aiming to improve decision-making and optimize procurement strategies. Balances theoretical foundations, case-based discussions, and real-world applications; designed for individuals with limited or no procurement experience. Equips learners with the skills to manage supplier relationships effectively, adopt collaborative strategies, and leverage cutting-edge technologies to build resilient, sustainable supply chains.
Faculty: J. Rice
MW 10:00 - 11:30 AM
STS.432J
21H.990J
Narrating the Anthropocene: Understanding a Multi-Species Universe
Fall
| 9 Cr.
Narrating the Anthropocene: Understanding a Multi-Species Universe
Fall
9 Cr.
21H.990J
Fall 2024 | Examines human concern about the planet and how that fixation shapes concepts of time & space, knowledge-production, understandings of what it means to be human and non-human, as well as trends in scholarship, art, culture & politics. Indexes the way numerous actors and institutions came to understand, debate & narrate the Anthropocene, a geological epoch defined by human-induced climate change. Explores how it as a concept has opened up new ways of understanding relations within the planet, including care, accountability & multi-species mutualism. Considers narrative registers as well, how scholars, writers, artists & working people narrate the Anthropocene. Students undertake an original project in research &/or experimental narrative forms inspired by the reading. Limited to 12.
Faculty: K. Brown, M. Black
W 10:00 am - 1:00 pm
STS.434
Postapocalyptic Science and Technology Studies
Fall
| 9 Cr.
Postapocalyptic Science and Technology Studies
Fall
9 Cr.
Fall 2024 | Examines how science fiction is deployed as a political tool for enacting change in the present and how it has emerged as a privileged symbolic field for the expression of hopes and anxieties that drive both culture and tech industries. Explores how societies around the globe — both mainstream and in the periphery — are confronting a triple crisis that threatens not only civil order but also the very existence of certain forms of life: financial collapse which increased the awareness of mass inequality; climate change and loss of biodiversity; and the rise of ethno-nationalisms, which threaten representative democracies.
Faculty: E. Nelson
T 2:00 pm - 5:00 pm
Student Resources
Sustainability Certificate Pathways
Curious how you can fit the Sustainability Certificate courses into your schedule? Check out our Pathways Document for examples on how to achieve the certificate during your time at MIT:
Streams of Study: Your Guide to Break Into Sustainable Business
Discover the courses, events, resources, and opportunities at MIT and beyond that will help you make an impact in evolving sustainability fields: