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Environmental degradation and climate change are global emergencies, yet we live in a world that is ecologically and culturally diverse, and which is economically and socially unequal.
Sustainable solutions thus require knowledge of the complex interactions and trade-offs between environmental, economic, social and cultural sustainability. Our Masters course provides this essential interdisciplinary overview, allowing you to specialise in the sustainability of ecosystems, communities, landscapes, buildings and heritage, or to focus on the interactions between them.
Working within an exciting collaboration between our Departments of Archaeology, and Environment and Geography, you’ll gain a fascinating insight into the sustainability of processes that take place over a few years to many thousands of years. Thinking across disciplines to address issues of current and future sustainability is both stimulating and challenging, requiring expertise from a range of subject areas. Our staff and students work together to create interdisciplinary teams, and our wide range of module options and guided independent research opportunities allow you to tailor your studies to your interests and career ambitions.
2:2 or equivalent in a relevant subject such as Archaeology, Anthropology, Biology, Conservation, Ecology, Geography or related fields.
If you don’t have conventional qualifications, but do have appropriate, relevant experience, you are encouraged to apply. We carefully consider each application on its merits.
For fees and funding options, please visit website to find out more
Through the development of skills in the collation, analysis, synthesis and presentation of interdisciplinary data, and an ability to work as part of a team, you’ll graduate well-placed for a range of career paths, including progression to a PhD and research careers.
Core modules
Sustainability I: Definitions of Sustainability and Methods of Assessment
Sustainability II: Understanding Sustainability as Change Through Time
Option modules
You'll then customise your programme by choosing option modules taught in both the Department of Archaeology and the Department of Environment and Geography; these will help you to focus on a particular period, region or specialist area:
Sustainable Environment options
Archaeologies of Colonialism in the British Atlantic World
Climate Science and Policy
Ecosystem Services & Conservation
Environmental Economics
Environmental Management
GIS and Spatial Analysis
Plants in Archaeology
Spatial Analysis and Modelling for Flood Risk Management
Sustainability Clinic
Social and Economics Transformation options
Archaeologies of Colonialism in the British Atlantic World
Business and Environment
Climate Science and Policy
Data Science for Archaeology
Ecosystem Services & Conservation
Environmental Economics
Environmental Management
GIS and Spatial Analysis
Landscape Survey and Geophysics
Medieval Settlement and Communities
Spatial Analysis and Modelling for Flood Risk Management
Virtual Reality and 3D Modelling
Historical Ecologies options
Archaeologies of Colonialism in the British Atlantic World
Climate Science and Policy
Data Science for Archaeology
Ecosystem Services & Conservation
Environmental Economics
Environmental Management
GIS and Spatial Analysis
Landscape Survey and Geophysics
Medieval Settlement and Communities
Spatial Analysis and Modelling for Flood Risk Management
Sustainability Clinic
Thinking through Material Culture
Sustainable Cultural Heritage options
Building Conservation Projects
Buildings Recording
Contemporary Issues in Museums
Digital Approaches to Archaeology
Digital Creativity
Heritage Principles and Concepts
Histories of Conservation
Presenting Historic Houses
Researching & Analysing Historic Buildings
Sustainable Buildings: Carbon, Retrofit and Reuse
Sustainable Conservation Challenges
Understanding & Interpreting Historic Buildings
Virtual Reality and 3D Modelling
You'll also have the opportunity to choose options from our full module catalogue. Examples may include:
Ancient Biomolecules
Animal Bones for Archaeologists
Applied Economic Methods
Artefacts and Materials Analysis
Becoming Human
Critical Approaches to Archaeological Practice
Death, Burial and Commemoration in the Roman World
Debates in Funerary Archaeology
Experimental Archaeology
Life and Death in Iron Age Britain and Ireland
Making the Nation
Mesolithic Life and Death
Museums, Audiences & Interpretation
Prehistoric Art: Origins and Transitions
Project Management
Roman Archaeology: Ancient pasts, current issues
Roman Europe
Skeletal Evidence for Health in the Past
The Ancient Celts: Archaeology and Identity in Iron Age Europe
The Archaeology of Roman Religion
The Archaeology of the Human Skeleton
The Viking Age: People, Places, Things
Zooarchaeology in Context
Some option modules combinations may not be possible. The option available to you will be confirmed after you begin your course.
Our modules may change to reflect the latest academic thinking and expertise of our staff, and in line with Department/School academic planning.
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