

BSc Geography with Natural Hazard Management
About this course
Geography with natural hazard management sits at the junction of physical science, social science, and applied policy. Natural hazards, from earthquakes and volcanic eruptions to floods, storms, and landslides, are not simply physical events. They become disasters through the interaction of environmental forces with human settlement patterns, infrastructure, governance, and inequality. Understanding hazards therefore demands both scientific knowledge of Earth's processes and social analysis of why some communities are far more vulnerable than others. This three-year full-time programme at the University of Chester integrates core geographical knowledge with a focused strand in natural hazard management. You will study physical geography, including geomorphology, climatology, and Earth processes, alongside human and environmental geography, learning to move between different scales of analysis and different disciplinary approaches. The natural hazard management element develops your understanding of risk assessment, disaster preparedness, emergency response, and the policy frameworks through which governments and international organisations attempt to reduce harm from natural events. The programme includes a sandwich year, a work placement, and a year abroad, giving you a remarkably rich set of practical and international experiences embedded within the degree. With a typical tariff of 104 points, the programme welcomes students with genuine interest in the subject and a willingness to engage with both its scientific and social dimensions. Fieldwork is central to geography degrees, and the practical skills you develop in data collection, GIS, and environmental analysis are directly applicable in a range of professional settings. The sandwich and placement years give you the opportunity to apply these skills in real organisations before you graduate. Graduates move into careers in environmental consultancy, disaster risk reduction, emergency management, local and national government, international development, urban planning, and the research sector. Non-governmental organisations working on climate adaptation and humanitarian response also draw on this combination of skills. Further study at postgraduate level in geography, environmental management, or disaster risk is a common next step for graduates wanting to specialise.
Syllabus & Modules
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