

BASc Global Sustainable Development
About this course
Global sustainable development addresses one of the central questions of our time: how can human societies meet their needs today without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs? The discipline draws on economics, politics, sociology, environmental science and ethics to examine the interconnected pressures of climate change, inequality, resource consumption and governance. It is fundamentally concerned with finding practical, equitable solutions to problems that cross national borders and affect communities in very different ways. At Warwick, this degree challenges you to think critically about the environment, sustainable business and the political economy of development. You will examine how policies are made and contested at local, national and international levels, and you will interrogate the assumptions behind widely used frameworks like the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The programme encourages you to combine rigorous analysis with a genuine commitment to change, weighing evidence carefully rather than accepting easy narratives. A placement year and a year abroad are both available, giving you the opportunity to test your thinking in real-world and cross-cultural contexts, and to build the international networks that matter in this field. A work placement is also built into the programme, strengthening your practical understanding of how organisations pursue sustainability goals in practice. The three-year full-time programme is structured to move you from foundational knowledge toward independent, interdisciplinary inquiry. You will engage with case studies from across the global south and north, learning to apply different theoretical lenses to the same problem and to communicate your findings clearly to varied audiences. Quantitative and qualitative research methods both feature, equipping you to gather and assess evidence in a range of settings. Graduates go on to work in international development organisations, NGOs, government policy roles, sustainability consultancy, the private sector and journalism. The combination of analytical rigour and real-world experience that this degree provides is increasingly sought after by employers who recognise that addressing environmental and social challenges requires people who can bridge disciplines and think across scales. Further study at postgraduate level, including research degrees focused on development, environment or policy, is also a common pathway.
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