

MA Geography and Social Anthropology
About this course
Geography and social anthropology is a combination that addresses the physical and human dimensions of the world through two complementary disciplines. Geography examines the processes that shape the Earth's surface, the distribution of human populations, the organisation of economies and environments, and the spatial patterns of inequality, urbanisation, and environmental change. Social anthropology investigates how human communities organise themselves, how they make meaning, how they relate to the natural world, and what varies and what is shared across radically different ways of life. Together they produce graduates who can engage with both the physical and cultural dimensions of the world's most challenging questions. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year full-time programme challenges you to think critically and creatively about the world around you, understanding the interaction of environmental systems and human activity at multiple scales. You will engage with physical and human geography alongside the core concepts, methods, and theories of social anthropology, including ethnographic fieldwork, kinship, religion, exchange, political organisation, and the anthropology of the environment. A year abroad is available, giving you the opportunity to study in an international university environment and to experience at first hand the kind of cultural and environmental diversity that geography and anthropology are concerned with understanding. With a typical entry tariff of 184 UCAS points, this is a competitive programme at one of Scotland's leading universities. Graduates pursue careers in environmental consultancy, international development, NGOs, the civil service, cultural heritage, community development, social research, journalism, urban planning, and the voluntary sector. The combination of spatial analysis skills, fieldwork experience, and anthropological understanding is particularly well suited to roles requiring both scientific rigour and cultural sensitivity. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in geography, anthropology, development studies, or environmental science.
Syllabus & Modules
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