

BA Culture, Environment and Social Change
About this course
Culture, environment, and social change are not three separate topics that happen to share a degree title: they are deeply interconnected dimensions of the same set of global challenges. Questions about climate change and resource depletion cannot be understood without engaging with the political economies and cultural values that shape how societies use the natural world. Mass migration and social inequality are not simply humanitarian crises but the products of environmental pressures, historical injustices, and social structures that require analytical tools from multiple disciplines to understand and address. At Westminster this part-time programme is designed to help you make sense of a complex and dynamically changing world, engaging with the most important issues of the present from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. You will examine critical issues at different scales, from the local and the personal to the national and the global, developing the capacity to move between different frameworks and to understand how culture, environment, and social organisation are intertwined. The programme is interdisciplinary by design, drawing on environmental studies, cultural theory, geography, sociology, and related fields to equip you with a rich and flexible set of analytical tools. The part-time structure makes the programme accessible to students who are combining study with work or other commitments, and Westminster's location in London gives the programme access to the cultural and policy communities that engage most directly with the questions it addresses. Graduates move into careers in policy, environmental organisations, civil society, journalism, international development, research, community development, public administration, and the arts and cultural sector. Many also continue to postgraduate study in areas such as environmental policy, social research, cultural studies, or sustainability, building towards specialist professional or research careers.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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