Life Sciences
Conflict & Cooperation in Social Groups
Module code: C1114
Level 6
15 credits in spring semester
Teaching method: Seminar, Lecture
Assessment modes: Coursework
Conflict and cooperation can be seen across the whole of biology. You can study it among genes or organisms, in societies of micro-organisms, animals and humans, and also in multi-species mutualisms. It is relevant both in the origin of life and in modern-day organisms and societies.
This module focuses on:
- factors affecting the balance between conflict and cooperation in human society
- vertebrate societies including primates and cooperative breeders
- mutualism partners
- genes within organisms.
In seminars, research papers are initially presented by faculty and then by students.
Module learning outcomes
- Recall, explain and synthesize acquired knowledge about empirical evidence, scientific procedures, theoretical concepts and principles.
- Write a summary/synthesis of a scientific paper or pair of papers that would be of interest to scientists, including both specialists and non-specialists, and which follows the format of a News & Views article in Nature magazine, or equivalent.
- Give a seminar presentation, including slides, in order to present a particular scientific paper.
- Read the primary scientific literature and participate in seminar discussions that critically discuss and compare scientific papers in relation to broader questions in evolutionary biology, behavioural ecology and socio-biology.