Most of the established "environmental" degrees (outside of pure
science) have focused on environmental management, which can be
applied to either NGO, private, or public sector work. Among the
better programs are those at Duke (http://www.env.duke.edu/) and Yale
(http://environment.yale.edu/index.html , where I am currently
enrolled). A degree focused specifically on activism seems rather odd,
simply because its rarely a long-term career choice for people given
the hours, wage, and common burnout. The more common path that
dedicated activists take is a program called GreenCorps (http://
www.greencorps.org/), a paid program that places participants with a
number of different activist NGOs over the course of a year.
-Zeke
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