

MA Geography and Sustainable Development
About this course
Geography and sustainable development together address one of the most urgent and complex challenges of our time: understanding the relationship between human societies and the natural systems on which they depend, and finding ways to manage that relationship so that both can flourish. Geography as a discipline spans the physical world, examining the processes that shape landscapes, climates, and ecosystems, and the human world, examining how societies, economies, and cultures are distributed and organised across space. Sustainable development adds a normative and policy dimension, asking how the insights of environmental science and social geography can inform the choices made by governments, communities, and organisations. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year full-time programme offers an exciting intellectual challenge for students who want to think critically and creatively about the world around them, as the current description notes, developing the capacity to understand the interaction of environmental systems and human activity. You will engage with physical geography including climatology, geomorphology, and biogeography alongside human geography covering economic geography, political ecology, urban geography, and development studies. Sustainability runs as a thread throughout: you will examine how resource use, land change, climate policy, and development decisions interact, and you will develop the quantitative and qualitative research skills that allow you to engage rigorously with complex socio-environmental questions. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study at a partner university in another country and to engage with sustainability challenges and approaches in a different national and environmental context. Fieldwork, both in Scotland and internationally, is a core feature of geographical education at St Andrews. Graduates from geography and sustainable development programmes pursue careers in environmental consultancy, urban and regional planning, international development, policy and government, sustainability roles in the private sector, conservation organisations, research, and education. The combination of environmental understanding and social analysis is increasingly valued across many sectors. Postgraduate study in geography, environmental policy, development studies, or related fields supports those seeking specialist expertise or academic careers.
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