

MGeog Human Geography
About this course
Human geography is the study of the relationships between people and the places they inhabit. It asks how societies are organised spatially, how economic activity is distributed across landscapes and between regions, how cultures develop in particular places, and how globalisation, migration, urbanisation, and environmental change are reshaping human communities. At its best, human geography bridges the qualitative and the quantitative, drawing on fieldwork, interviews, spatial analysis, and statistical methods to understand the world with both rigour and nuance. At the University of Lincoln, this four-year full-time degree places geography at the heart of some of humanity's greatest challenges, from climate change and health inequalities to food security and natural hazards. You will study the social, economic, and environmental dimensions of these challenges, developing the ability to understand the links between humanity and the environments we inhabit. The programme includes a sandwich year placement, giving you professional experience in a relevant organisation, and a year abroad, allowing you to study geographical issues in a different national context. Work placement activity is integrated throughout the programme, ensuring your learning is connected to real-world applications. A typical entry tariff of 104 points applies. You will develop skills in fieldwork, qualitative and quantitative research methods, spatial analysis, GIS, report writing, and the ability to communicate complex geographical information clearly to different audiences. These are capabilities valued across many professional contexts, from planning and environmental management to international development and policy research. Graduates go on to work in urban and regional planning, environmental consultancy, international development, public health, social research, government, the voluntary sector, and education. Postgraduate study in human geography, planning, international development, or environmental policy supports those seeking specialist or research careers.
Syllabus & Modules
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