After a successful first session, MIT’s Center for Transportation & Logistics is offering a second session of its humanitarian logistics course, to be taught by MIT Humanitarian Supply Chain Lab Director Jarrod Goentzel.
This course is free for an audit learner and for a limited time, MIT’s edX will offer 30% for those that want to obtain a verified certificate. The course runs for 9 weeks and is created by the same team behind the MITx MicroMasters Program in Supply Chain Management.
You can sign up here.
The course will explore how supply chain management concepts and methods can be applied within dynamic, resource-constrained contexts. According to MIT, students will learn how to professionally plan emergency operations that deliver essential goods and services to people affected by natural disaster, epidemic, pandemic, famine, armed conflict, complex emergency, and other humanitarian crises. Course topics are also foundational for understanding how international and economic development efforts support market resilience in meeting community needs during crisis.
The course is designed to accommodate students from various backgrounds, including those with limited supply chain or humanitarian experience. It can be an avenue into:
- Social impact – humanitarian action makes direct impact through tangible operations
- Professional engagement – course knowledge enables you to professionally interact with humanitarian organizations such as the Red Cross, Doctors without Borders, Oxfam, Mercy Corps, and World Vision; United Nations agencies such as World Food Program (WFP), World Health Organization (WHO), and UNICEF; and national, regional, or local government emergency management agencies (e.g. FEMA), ministries or departments of public health and human services, and Centers for Disease Control (CDC).
- New careers – the course credential can open career opportunities in humanitarian roles such as operations/program analyst, supply chain manager, emergency manager, emergency planner, emergency program director, procurement assistant/officer, logistics assistant/officer, program assistant/officer.
SC
MR
More Humanitarian Supply Chains
- When disaster strikes, the supply chain becomes the key to life
- MIT CTL offering humanitarian logistics course
- 5 things supply chain managers can do to contribute to humanitarian relief
- Help doesn’t arrive without the supply chain
- ALAN’s Helpful Post-Tornado Relief Do’s And Don’ts
- More Humanitarian Supply Chains
What's Related in Humanitarian Supply Chains
Explore
Topics
Business Management News
- Subscribe to Straight Talk
- Mentorship insights: Empowering women leaders in supply chain management
- Procurement strategy: Managing Scope 3 emission suppliers for a sustainable supply chain
- Services economy sees gains for fifth straight month in November, reports ISM
- Driving supply chain flexibility in an uncertain and volatile world
- November manufacturing output increases but with more room to run, reports ISM
- More Business Management