

BA Geography with Global Development with a Foundation Year
About this course
Geography is one of the most genuinely integrative subjects available at university, spanning the physical processes that shape landscapes and climates and the human and political forces that determine how different communities experience and respond to those processes. Global development sits at the heart of geography's human dimension, asking why wealth, health, and opportunity are so unevenly distributed across the world and what can be done about it. Studying these subjects together provides both the analytical toolkit to understand complex global systems and the ethical framework to ask the right questions about them. At the University of East Anglia, this four-year programme opens with a foundation year designed to build the academic skills and subject knowledge needed for the full degree. Once you progress into the main programme, you will study both physical and human geography, exploring topics such as climate, geomorphology, urban change, migration, and international development. Global development threads bring in economic geography, postcolonial theory, and the politics of aid and trade, encouraging you to think about how global patterns of inequality are produced and maintained. Research methods are central to the degree, and you will learn to work with quantitative data alongside qualitative and ethnographic approaches. UEA has a strong tradition of environmental and development research, and the programme benefits from academic staff engaged with current debates in these fields. Geography graduates with a global development focus pursue careers in a genuinely wide range of sectors. International development organisations, non-governmental organisations, and the civil service are common destinations. Environmental consultancy, urban and regional planning, and sustainability roles in the private sector draw others. Journalism, policy research, and work in international charities or humanitarian organisations are further possibilities. Some graduates continue to postgraduate study, deepening their expertise in development economics, environmental policy, or human geography, or training for roles in international affairs and diplomacy.
Syllabus & Modules
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