

MA Social Anthropology and Sustainable Development
About this course
Social anthropology is the comparative study of human societies and cultures, asking how different peoples organise their social lives, what meanings they attach to their practices, and what it reveals about the range of ways it is possible to be human. Sustainable development, meanwhile, grapples with one of the defining challenges of our era: how to meet present human needs without undermining the ecological and social foundations that future generations will depend on. Combining these two disciplines produces a degree with unusual intellectual depth and real-world relevance. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year MA (Hons) degree includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to deepen your understanding of another culture through direct immersion and academic study in an international setting. Social anthropology at St Andrews explores the huge diversity of contemporary human experience, analysing what makes us similar and what makes us different. You will engage with ethnographic methods and texts, learning to look carefully at social life and to interpret what you observe with intellectual humility and rigour. In sustainable development, you will examine the economic, political, ecological, and social dimensions of sustainability, considering how communities, states, and international organisations navigate the tensions between development and environmental limits. Drawing on anthropology's sensitivity to local context and lived experience, you will be well placed to understand why development interventions succeed or fail, and what it means to take seriously the knowledge and priorities of the communities involved. You will develop skills in critical analysis, qualitative research, cross-cultural communication, and the ability to engage with complex, contested questions from multiple disciplinary angles. These are capacities that matter enormously in a world increasingly preoccupied with how to sustain human wellbeing on a finite planet. Graduates from this combination pursue careers in international development organisations, NGOs, environmental consultancy, policy, social research, journalism, and the civil service. The anthropological training is particularly valued in roles that require understanding community dynamics, designing inclusive programmes, or evaluating interventions. Postgraduate study in anthropology, development studies, environmental policy, or area studies is a natural route for those who wish to specialise further or pursue academic research.
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