This major takes full advantage of the expertise existing across FENV units, characteristic of BEnv majors. It will prepare students to enter positions or continue in graduate studies in the broadly defined area of resource management, including fisheries, agriculture, forestry, cultural resources, energy and tourism. REM program requirements, directed by educational goals, provide students with a solid understanding of the interplay of historical, biophysical and socio-cultural factors; Indigenous/First Nations Perspectives; resource use and sustainability; geospatial, statistical and modeling methodologies; decision making, communication, conflict resolution, and legislative/regulatory frameworks as they relate to resource management.