

BSc Environmental Geography
About this course
Environmental geography examines the relationship between human societies and the natural world, asking how people have shaped the environments they inhabit and how those environments shape human life in return. It draws on physical geography, ecology, earth sciences, and the social sciences to understand processes ranging from climate change and land use to pollution, conservation, and sustainable development. The discipline is urgently relevant to the environmental challenges of the twenty-first century, giving you the intellectual tools to understand what is happening to the planet's systems and the analytical skills to contribute to efforts to protect and restore them. At York St John University, this part-time programme includes a foundation year to build your scientific and geographical foundations, as well as a sandwich year, a year abroad, and work placement opportunities. This combination of structural features means you will gain substantial professional experience in environmental settings and develop an international perspective on environmental challenges, which are by their nature global in scale. You will develop skills in field data collection, geographic information systems, remote sensing, environmental impact assessment, and the quantitative and qualitative analysis of environmental data. The programme also develops your ability to communicate the importance of environmental issues to diverse audiences, a skill that is increasingly important in a field where public and policy engagement is central. Environmental geography graduates pursue careers in environmental consultancy, conservation, land management, planning, sustainability, public health, and international environmental organisations. Roles include environmental consultant, conservation officer, planning officer, sustainability manager, GIS analyst, and environmental impact assessor. The combination of scientific understanding and social science awareness makes environmental geography graduates valuable in roles that require bridging technical expertise with policy, community engagement, and public communication. Postgraduate study in environmental management, conservation biology, climate policy, or geographic information science is a natural next step for those who wish to specialise further or pursue research.
Syllabus & Modules
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