Climate, Risk and Society

MSc
1 year full-time, 2 years part-time
Durham City
L7KD09
Course details
The MSc in Climate, Risk and Society takes a natural science approach to climate risk. Designed to equip you with an in-depth understanding of how human influence on climate is creating new risks, challenges and greater social vulnerability, it also teaches the necessary skills to develop effective responses to such natural and socio-political threats.
The course is likely to appeal to those with a background in social science, natural science or engineering. It explores how climate risk is defined and managed by individuals, governments and organisations, and considers the decisions they make when addressing uncertainty and the threats it poses to environments and communities across the globe.
During your studies, which will be taken over one year full-time or two years part-time, you will be taught about understanding risk as well as risk frontiers, and climate change and society. You will also complete a major project; this can take the form of a research-based dissertation where you carry out original independent study or a vocational dissertation that combines external placements with independent research.
To further embed practice into the course, we work closely with the University’s Institute of Hazard, Risk and Resilience (IHRR). Through this, you will gain a vital insight into practitioner and academic perspectives at the forefront of risk thinking and practice. The IHRR also hosts an annual seminar series tailored specifically to students on the climate risk postgraduate programmes.
The Department’s postgraduate community is a vibrant body which offers a supportive network. When you join us you will become part of an active group that is both social and academic, participating in research events and attending talks throughout the year.
See more on our Geography Taught Masters course pages.
Course structure
Year 1 modules
Core modules:
Understanding Risk (30 credits)
provides an overview of the key theories and concepts that reflect the interdisciplinary nature of risk involving human action and environmental events. You will learn the basic concepts and terms used to describe and communicate risk, as well as studying interventions involved in managing, preventing or mitigating against risk to populations, and building an understanding of the determinants of risk and its social inequalities.
Climate Change and Society (15 credits)
The module will expand students’ comprehension of the diverse societal processes underpinning climate change and its impacts in particular places across the globe.
Dissertation (Research or Vocational) 60 credits
builds on your learning in core and optional modules. It offers the option to develop your independent research skills through a research dissertation in which you carry out original independent research supported by our staff. Alternatively, you can choose the vocational dissertation route which combines research with collaborations or placements with external organisations. We offer vocational dissertation partnerships and project options through our large and growing partner and alumni network, or we can support you in developing your own vocational research collaborations.
Environmental Data Science (30 credits)
This module will develop advanced data analysis skills such as programming, modelling and GIS, using datasets that allow advanced insight to a range of environmental processes as well as experience in a range of data sources.
Knowledge for Action and Leadership (15 credits)
The module develops practical skills of leadership, engagement and dissemination relevant to creating sustainable futures.
Risk Frontiers (15 credits)
This module looks at current risk research and provides training in the generic skills of interpreting, criticising and collating the emerging research. What you learn will help meet the demands of the risk industry and associated areas such as disaster reduction, security, development and humanitarian relief.
Optional modules:
Climate and Environmental Change Past and Present (15 credits)
This module will assess how different paleo-environmental records are produced and analysed, and how they can be interpreted to make future predictions that enhance sustainability. It involves fieldwork, as well as lectures and seminars.
Anticipating Future Environments (15 credits)
This module will consider how we can predict the future behaviour of a range of different environmental systems under conditions of uncertainty, synthesising the state of the art and critically analysing current knowledge to enhance sustainability.
Learning
The course offers an interactive and participatory approach in which we aim to get to know you and work with you individually. Classes are delivered using a combination of lectures, seminars, tutorials, workshops and practical sessions, with approaches to learning structured around the content of the module.
You will receive approximately eight hours of module contact time per week during terms one and two, although this can vary from week to week. In total, for full-time study, you should expect to devote around eight hours per day to work during term time, including all of your assessments.
Throughout the course, you will be supported by an academic advisor and you will also be assigned a dissertation supervisor.
Assessment
All modules require the completion of coursework, including traditional tools of assessment such as essays, presentations and reports but also alternative forms such as podcasts and portfolios featuring a compilation of work.
In the final term and over the summer, you will complete a research-based or vocational dissertation, bringing together elements of learning from across all the taught modules.
Entry requirements
We typically require a 2:1 Bachelor (Honours) degree (or overseas equivalent), in any degree subject (preferably within the same discipline as programme applying for e.g. BSc to MSc).
A personal statement should include an outline of your interest and understanding of your chosen programme.
Alternative qualifications
International students who do not meet direct entry requirements for this degree might have the option to complete an International Foundation Year.
Home students who do not meet our direct entry requirements, may be eligible for our Foundation Programme which offers multidisciplinary programmes to prepare you for a range of specified degree programmes.
Fees and funding
The fees for this academic year have not been confirmed yet.
Please also check costs for colleges and accommodation.
Scholarships and Bursaries
We are committed to supporting the best students irrespective of financial circumstances and are delighted to offer a range of funding opportunities.
Find out more about Scholarships and BursariesCareer opportunities
Geography
Studying in a department with a global reputation for the quality of research, our postgraduates are well placed to continue research at a higher level or progress into a rewarding professional career.
Taught courses are designed to develop the transferable skills that are highly sought after by employers such as the ability to analyse and communicate complex data and make decisions, and our postgraduates are much valued in areas such as government, non-governmental organisations and the charity sector.
Other roles in which postgraduates make a real difference to people and communities include environmental consultancy, conservation, town planning, geopolitical risk analysis, market research, insurance, development work, health, public policy, social research, logistics, education, energy, utilities, tourism, banking, law, PR, IT.
Department information
Geography
Geography at Durham explores the very real challenges facing the world, be they natural or a consequence of human activity. Through teaching and research in risk, climate change, sustainable futures, hazards and security, we provide in-depth insight into these problems and how they might be resolved using practical and sustainable solutions.
The Department of Geography is a global academic centre for the study of physical and human geography. Our high-quality research and our industry connections combine to create a learning experience underpinned by the theory and practice to take on the challenges we face as a result of natural events and human activity.
We provide a leading-edge environment in which to study, giving a learning experience that is tailored to suit particular interests. We offer two suites of Masters programmes:
The courses on the Sustainable Futures route respond to the profound challenge of developing ‘sustainable futures’ in the midst of climate change, by understanding relations between climate change, cities, environmental processes and society, and on exploring and evaluating emergent sustainable solutions at different scales.
The courses on the Risk route provide a thorough grounding in theoretical and practical approaches to identifying, understanding, framing, assessing and managing different aspects of risk.
Our academic staff are experts in their field with research activity in the Department divided into seven clusters comprising Politics-State-Space, Economy and Culture, Urban Worlds, Geographies of Life as well as Sea Level, Ice and Climate, Catchments and Rivers, and Hazards and Surface Change.
The postgraduate community plays a crucial role in contributing to the Department’s research goals, by conducting original research and by learning from research-led teaching about understanding and implementing the process of turning policy into practice. An in-house conference provides the opportunity for postgraduates to present ideas.
For more information see our department pages.
Facilities
The Department of Geography is located on the main campus of Durham University at Lower Mountjoy, not far from the historic centre of the city with UNESCO World Heritage status.
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