To develop sustainable lifestyles, communities, environments and resources, we must first understand how we, as humans, interact with, modify and depend on our surroundings, and how these interrelationships vary spatially and temporally across and between locations. Accredited by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), and compliant with the research training requirements for ESRC PhD scholarships, our MA equips you with skills, knowledge and 'hands-on' experience of human geography and sustainability-related research to generate the new insight needed to make a positive difference to our world, now and for the future.
The complex challenges facing the world today - including social and spatial inequalities, new migration flows, climate change and pollution - have led society to question the interactions between humans and the environment, demanding answers and new ways of working that human geography can provide.
Studying the ways in which people interact in economic, political, social, and spatial contexts can help us identify issues and challenges, and understand what causes them. Only then, can we develop solutions to improve long-term human wellbeing and protect the planet as a whole, distributing and managing our natural resources more equitably and sustainably.
Adopting an interdisciplinary approach, the MA in Human Geography and Sustainability Research not only draws on social sciences more generally, but also brings together Keele's internationally recognised expertise across the two distinct disciplines of human geography and sustainability.
Generic and subject-specific research training prepares you to consider why and how humans behave, interact with, shape and affect their surroundings, studying our many diverse environments, habitats and resources (both natural and man-made).
Hands-on practical research equips you with valuable experience and skills to identify innovative solutions to broader societal problems. Such measures could include the development of new approaches for securing migrant settlement and integration, tackling rural deprivation, addressing health inequalities and / or generating new forms of sustainable energy.
As part of our exciting advanced traineeships, you'll work with a research mentor on one of our 'live' research projects. Typical activities may include support to collect and analyse data, conduct literature reviews, assist the preparation of future funding bids, or to prepare 'key findings' reports.
The Dissertation provides a further opportunity to undertake an extended independent research project with freedom to come up with your own idea for subject matter or choose from a list of selected research projects. These may include: animal geographies, rural or urban geographies (including rural and urban planning), post-colonial geographies, health geographies, temporal geographies of 'busyness', children's geographies, plastics and recycling geographies, geographies of international migration, geographies of responsibility and care, and geographies of mobility (and e-mobility).
You'll graduate with cutting-edge insight into the latest academic, policy and practice-related discussions, debates and developments in the fields of human geography and sustainability, together with the advanced research skills required for a career in the public, private or third sector. This includes positions with national and local government, other public bodies, non-governmental organisations (NGOs), private sector consultancies, research and policy institutes, charitable and community organisations.