

BSc Geography
About this course
Geography is one of the most genuinely integrative academic disciplines, exploring the relationships between the physical world and the human societies that inhabit it. On one side, physical geography examines landforms, soils, rivers, climates, and ecosystems, asking how the Earth's surface processes work and how they change over time. On the other, human geography explores how populations, cities, economies, and cultures are organised across space, and how political and social forces shape the uneven distribution of wealth, opportunity, and environmental risk. The discipline holds these two dimensions together, insisting that neither can be fully understood without the other. At the University of Northampton, this three-year degree gives you a broad and solid grounding in both physical and human geography. You will study climatology, geomorphology, and environmental change alongside urban geography, economic geography, and the politics of development and inequality. Research methods, including fieldwork, GIS, statistical analysis, and qualitative approaches, are central to the programme, developing the practical skills that both academic research and professional employment in geography-related fields require. Northampton's location in the East Midlands provides a range of accessible fieldwork environments, and the programme draws on geographical questions that have clear relevance to the contemporary world, from climate change and food security to urbanisation and migration. Geography graduates are valued across a wide range of professional fields precisely because the discipline trains you to think across scales, sectors, and disciplinary boundaries. Environmental consultancy, planning, and sustainability roles draw heavily on physical geography skills. Urban planning, housing, transport, and public policy draw on human geography. GIS specialists are in demand across local government, infrastructure, and environmental management. International development organisations, the civil service, and charities working on climate, environment, and social issues all provide career pathways. Teaching geography at secondary level is a common route, and some graduates continue to postgraduate study in geography, environmental management, or a related discipline.
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