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BASc Philosophy and Global Sustainable Development
About this course
Philosophy and global sustainable development is an unusual and genuinely important combination, bringing together the discipline of careful reasoning about fundamental questions with the urgent practical challenges of our time. Sustainable development is not simply a technical problem: it is saturated with contested values, competing moral frameworks, and unresolved questions about justice, responsibility, and what we owe to future generations and to non-human life. Philosophy provides exactly the tools needed to engage seriously with those questions, while sustainable development gives philosophy an indispensable connection to the real world in which ideas must become action. At the University of Warwick you will study this three-year full-time programme, exploring how philosophical traditions past and present illuminate the problems of our time, from climate ethics and intergenerational justice to the political philosophy of development, the rights of communities, and the global governance of environmental challenges. Your sustainable development studies will give you grounding in the economic, social and political dimensions of sustainability, including the policy frameworks and institutional structures through which progress is attempted. The programme includes a sandwich year, a year abroad, and a work placement, giving you professional and international experience alongside your intellectual development. Graduates of this combination are well placed for careers in international development organisations, environmental NGOs, policy institutes, the civil service, sustainability consultancy, and the growing number of businesses and public bodies that take environmental and social responsibility seriously. The philosophical training equips you to work where ethical reasoning, stakeholder engagement, and the ability to articulate and challenge assumptions are valued. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in philosophy, development studies, environmental policy, or international relations, or move into research and advocacy roles where the combination of rigorous thinking and subject knowledge is a direct asset.
Syllabus & Modules
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