

MA Russian and Sustainable Development
About this course
Studying Russian alongside sustainable development is an intellectually distinctive combination that brings together one of the world's great languages and a discipline addressing some of the most consequential challenges of our time. Russian is spoken by over 150 million people and serves as a lingua franca across much of the post-Soviet world, from Central Asia to the Caucasus and beyond. It carries a literary and cultural tradition of extraordinary richness, from Pushkin and Dostoevsky to twentieth-century poetry and the dissident writing that flourished under Soviet repression. Sustainable development, meanwhile, examines how human societies can meet their present needs without compromising the ability of future generations to meet theirs, drawing on ecology, economics, politics, and social science to address questions of climate, resource use, inequality, and governance. At St Andrews this four-year full-time programme includes a year abroad, which is an essential component of developing genuine proficiency in Russian and of engaging with the societies where the language is spoken. The Russian element teaches you to use the language with grammatical accuracy and strong spoken aptitude, while modules in literature, film, cultural history, and contemporary society give you a deeper and more diverse understanding of Russian-language cultures and their distinctive intellectual traditions. The sustainable development component introduces you to the frameworks, evidence, and debates that shape how the world thinks about environmental and social sustainability, a field where Russia's vast territory, resource wealth, and geopolitical position make it particularly relevant as a case study. Graduates of this combination find careers in international development and environmental organisations, diplomatic and policy roles engaging with Russia and the post-Soviet world, energy and resource policy, journalism, area studies research, and translation and interpreting. The combination of linguistic access and sustainability expertise is unusual and genuinely valuable in organisations working at the intersection of environmental challenges and geopolitics. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in Russian and East European studies, international development, environmental policy, or related fields.
Syllabus & Modules
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