

MSci Human Geography with Year Abroad
About this course
Human geography sits at the intersection of people, place, and power. It asks why societies are organised the way they are, how landscapes are shaped by economic and political forces, and what it means to belong somewhere. Rather than cataloguing facts about the world, the discipline teaches you to read places critically, to question who benefits from particular spatial arrangements, and to think across scales from the neighbourhood to the global. It is one of the most genuinely interdisciplinary subjects available at degree level, drawing on sociology, economics, political science, environmental studies, and cultural theory in roughly equal measure. Studying human geography at the University of East Anglia, you will explore themes such as urbanisation and inequality, migration and identity, climate justice, geopolitics, and the changing nature of work and economy. You will develop strong skills in both qualitative and quantitative research methods, learning to analyse statistical data alongside conducting interviews, ethnographic fieldwork, and documentary analysis. The programme runs over four years and includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study at a partner university in another country and to understand first-hand how geography looks different depending on where you stand. This international dimension deepens your analytical frameworks and builds cultural adaptability that employers value highly. Fieldwork is central to how geographers learn. You will move between seminar rooms and real places, applying theoretical ideas to concrete situations and bringing what you observe back into academic discussion. Writing, argumentation, and the ability to synthesise complex evidence are skills you will refine throughout the programme, and these are transferable far beyond the discipline itself. Graduates in human geography move into an impressively wide range of careers. Urban planning, international development, environmental consultancy, policy analysis, journalism, and the charity sector are all common destinations. The research and analytical skills you develop are equally valued in the public sector, financial services, and management consultancy. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study, pursuing masters degrees or doctoral research in geography, development studies, public policy, or related fields. With a year abroad woven into the programme, you also leave well placed for roles that require an international outlook.
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