Specialization Advisor(s)
- Ashley Larsen (Class of 2024)
- Bruce Kendall (Class of 2025)
Conservation involves deliberate efforts to protect and sustain the Earth’s terrestrial, freshwater and marine natural resources. Conservation planning involves developing strategies and tactics for achieving conservation goals and objectives for specific resources and areas of interest.
Effective conservation planning requires consideration of local impacts as well as broader geographic and temporal effects. Political, social, and economic influences have significant impacts on conservation planning.
Students specializing in Conservation Planning (CP) in the Master of Environmental Science and Management program learn to systematically plan for conserving, managing, and restoring wild populations and ecosystems in a changing environment. The CP specialization is grounded in population and community ecology, landscape ecology, conservation biology, and climate change biology. Conservation planning requires technical training in ecological inventory and monitoring, data analysis, mapping, and modeling. CP students also learn about regulatory and policy frameworks surrounding issues such as land and water use planning, natural resource management, and endangered species protection.
Requirements
Master of Environmental Science and Management (MESM) students are required to take a minimum of 36 units in their primary specialization.
To complete a specialization, MESM students must take at least 12 units of specialization courses to develop depth, 16 units of electives to develop breadth across technical skills, management, and additional science, and 8 units of other relevant electives (student's choice), including relevant graduate courses and/or a maximum of 8 units of upper-division undergraduate courses. Courses may not be double-counted to fulfill requirements. For example, a specialization key course may not also count as a technical skill or other elective.
With an advisor's approval, MESM students may take courses in other UCSB departments as electives to satisfy specialization requirements. To request approval, students should send an email justification to their specialization advisor (a faculty member) and copy academics@bren.ucsb.edu. Students do not need to request approval to take courses in other departments unless they would like to count that course(s) toward specialization requirements.
ESM courses are offered through the Bren School and most ESM courses are offered every year. Courses marked with an asterisk (*) will be offered every other year.
Courses
CP Specialization Courses (12 units required)
Take 4 units:
ESM 270 Conservation Planning (4 units) Note: ESM 263 GIS is a prerequisite for this course. This is an 8-day intensive course offered immediately before the start of regular Fall quarter instruction.
Take at least 8 units:
ESM 270P Conservation Planning Practicum (4 units)
ESM 211 Applied Population Ecology (4 units)
ESM 212 Biological Community Survey & Analysis (4 units)
Students must select 16 units of electives to develop breadth from three categories: technical skills, management, and additional science.
If the minimum number of units specified for all three categories is less than 16, then the student must select other relevant courses from technical skills, management, and/or additional science to complete at least 16 units.
Technical Skills (Take at least 8 units)
ESM 212 Biological Community Survey & Analysis (4 units)
ESM 228 Monitoring and Evaluation (4 units)
ESM 232 Environmental Modeling (4 units)
ESM 244 Advanced Data Analysis (4 units)
ESM 262 Computing for Environmental Science and Management (2 units)
ESM 263 Geographic Information Systems (4 units)
ESM 269 Survey Design and Environmental Public Opinion (2 units)
ESM 271 Carbon Footprints and Carbon Accounting (4 units)
ESM 273 Life Cycle Assessment (4 units)
ESM 284 Sustainable Product Development (4 units)*
ESM 287 Energy Demand Analysis (4 units)
Management (Take at least 4 units)
ESM 225 Water Policy (4 units)
ESM 229 Economics and Policy of Climate Change (4 units)
ESM 230 Strategic Planning for Non-Profit Ventures (4 units)*
ESM 231 Creating Value through Environmental Solutions (2 units)
ESM 233 Testing Innovation Opportunities and Organizational Readiness (2 units)
ESM 242 Natural Resource Economics (4 units)
ESM 243 Environmental Policy Analysis (4 units)
ESM 245 Cost Benefit Analysis (4 units)
ESM 248 Environmental Institutions (4 units)
ESM 256B Value Proposition Design for New Environmental Ventures (2 units)
ESM 257 Coastal Marine Policy and Management (4 units)
ESM 277 International Environmental Law (2 units)*
ESM 278 Natural Resources Law and Policy (2 units)*
ESM 279 Financial Management and Environmental Accounting (4 units)
ESM 280 Practical Solutions in Business and Sustainability (2 units)
ESM 281 Advanced Business and Sustainability (4 units)
ESM 284 Sustainable Product Development (4 units)*
ESM 286 Energy Economics and Markets (4 units)*
ESM 295A Equity and the Environment (2 units)
ESM 295B Advanced Topics in Environmental Justice (2 units)
Additional Science (Take at least 4 units)
ESM 211 Applied Population Ecology (4 units)
ESM 214 Biological Waste Treatment (5 units)*
ESM 216 Science and Management for Forest Sustainability (2 units)
ESM 217 Planetary Health (4 units)
ESM 219 Microbial Processes in the Environment (5 units)*
ESM 222 Pollution Risk Management (4 units)
ESM 224 Sustainable Water Resources Management (4 units)
ESM 226 Groundwater Management (4 units)
ESM 235 Watershed Analysis (4 units)
ESM 237 Climate Change Impacts and Adaptation (4 units)
ESM 239 Advanced Climate Science for Policymakers (4 units)*
ESM 240 Climate Change Biology (2 units)*
ESM 254 Coastal Marine Ecosystem Processes (4 units)
ESM 260 Applied Marine Ecology (4 units)
ESM 270 Conservation Planning & Priority Setting (4 units) Note: ESM 263 GIS is a prerequisite for this course.
ESM 270P Conservation Planning Practicum (4 units)
ESM 282 Pollution Prevention (4 units)
ESM 288 Energy, Technology and the Environment (4 units)
Advanced Special Topics (Optional)
Advanced Special Topics courses (variable units) are typically taught by Visiting Professors and Lecturers and may be offered during any quarter of the academic year.
ESM 293 Advanced Special Topics in Climate and Energy
ESM 294 Advanced Special Topics in Environmental Law
ESM 296 Advanced Special Topics in Environmental Management
ESM 297 Advanced Special Topics in Environmental Policy
ESM 299 Advanced Special Topics in Environmental Science
ESM 430 Workshops in Environmental Science and Management
Relevant Courses in other UCSB departments
Students should consult the respective departments for availability and registration information.
EARTH 266 Chemical Oceanography
EARTH 276 Geological Oceanography
EEMB 142A Aquatic Communities
EEMB 243 Biological Oceanography
EEMB 279 Modeling Environmental and Ecological Change
GEOG 263 Intro to Physical Oceanography
Internship Opportunities
Students gain experience in an industry or sector relevant to career goals through a summer internship. CP students have taken internships with a wide variety of organizations, including the Environmental Defense Fund, Conservation International, California Tahoe Conservancy, The Wildlife Society, US Fish and Wildlife Service, Earthwatch Institute, Wilderness Society, Catalina Island Conservancy, and many other agencies, organizations, and companies.
Research & Special Projects
Students may participate in research directed by Bren faculty through one of the many interdisciplinary research groups at UCSB. Explore faculty research specializations.
Are you ready to solve environmental problems?
Request more information, get to know the Bren School, and start planning your application today.