

BSc Geography
About this course
Geography is one of the most intellectually wide-ranging subjects you can study at university. It asks questions that are simultaneously physical and social, local and global, historical and immediate. How do landscapes form and change over geological and human timescales? How do cities grow and decline? Why do development, poverty, and inequality have the spatial patterns they do? How are climate, biodiversity, and human activity entangled in ways that demand joined-up thinking? Geography takes all of these questions seriously and gives you the analytical tools to investigate them. At the University of Dundee, this four-year full-time programme develops both human and physical geography, so you will study human migration, urban planning, and political geography alongside geomorphology, climatology, and environmental science. You will learn to work with geographical information systems, to conduct fieldwork in different environments, to analyse spatial data, and to read landscapes in ways that combine scientific and humanistic modes of inquiry. A year abroad is built into the programme, giving you the chance to study geography in a different national context, which deepens your understanding of place and environment by exposing you to different academic traditions and physical or cultural settings. Geography develops unusually transferable skills. You will learn to synthesise large amounts of information from disparate sources, to communicate complex arguments in clear writing and visual form, to conduct independent research, and to think across disciplinary boundaries. These are qualities that employers across many sectors value highly. Graduates go into a wide range of careers, including urban and regional planning, environmental consultancy, conservation, international development, education, data analysis, government policy, and journalism. Many pursue postgraduate study in more specialised areas such as environmental management, urban design, climate science, or geographical information science. The breadth of the subject means there is rarely a narrow career path; instead, the degree opens multiple directions depending on where your interests lead you.
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