

MA Sustainable Development
About this course
Sustainable development addresses one of the most pressing questions of our time: how can human societies meet their needs, grow their economies, and improve living standards without destroying the natural systems on which all life depends? The discipline is genuinely interdisciplinary, drawing on natural science, economics, geography, politics, and ethics to understand the interconnections between environmental limits and human development. Its central challenges include the provision of clean water and sanitation, energy generation and supply, human health, food production and distribution, biodiversity loss, and climate change. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year programme approaches sustainable development with the academic rigour that the complexity of these challenges demands. You will develop the ability to think across disciplinary boundaries, understanding environmental systems, economic structures, and social and political processes in relation to one another. You will examine frameworks for measuring and pursuing sustainable outcomes at local, national, and global scales, and you will engage with the empirical evidence, theoretical debates, and policy instruments that define the field. The programme includes a year abroad, which gives you the opportunity to experience sustainable development challenges and solutions in a different national or regional context, deepening your comparative understanding. A typical entry tariff of around 216 UCAS points reflects the academic demands of the programme. Graduates go on to work in roles that span environmental consultancy, international development organisations, government policy, NGOs, research institutions, corporate sustainability functions, and urban and regional planning. The combination of analytical depth and interdisciplinary thinking the degree develops is valued in any context where complex problems require joined-up solutions. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study in sustainable development, environmental policy, development economics, or related fields, and some go on to research careers addressing the practical and theoretical challenges of the field.
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