

BA Geography
About this course
Geography is a discipline that refuses to sit still within the conventional division between sciences and humanities. It connects physical and human worlds, examining how natural processes shape landscapes and environments, how societies organise and contest space and resources, and how climate, urbanisation, migration and economic change interact in places around the world. Studying geography develops both scientific and social analytical skills, and a genuine engagement with some of the most important questions of our time. At the University of Manchester you will follow this three-year full-time degree in a department with strong research across both physical and human geography. The curriculum covers the foundational content of both strands, including geomorphology, climatology, urban geography, development, environmental change and the geographies of economy and culture, alongside the research methods and analytical tools that modern geography employs. Manchester's city location provides a living laboratory for urban and social geographical questions, while the university's research connections to international development, environmental science and urban planning enrich the academic context. You will develop field skills alongside analytical and research competencies, and the degree gives you the opportunity to pursue your particular geographical interests in greater depth as the programme progresses. Geography trains you to think across scales, to understand how global processes and local experiences are connected, and to bring both quantitative and qualitative evidence to bear on complex questions. These are adaptable intellectual capabilities. Graduates from geography degrees move into a very wide range of careers, including environmental consultancy, urban planning, international development, the civil service, local government, education, journalism, research, transport planning, the charity sector and corporate sustainability roles. The breadth of the degree means graduates are well suited to roles that require the ability to see connections across different systems and to work with diverse kinds of information. Postgraduate study in geography, urban planning, development studies or environmental management is well supported by the analytical foundations the degree provides.
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