Human Geography and Sustainable Development (Master's)

Our planet, cities, and local communities face environmental, social, and economic challenges. This programme gives you the competence to engage with global and local sustainability issues from a human geography perspective – emphasising relations between human behaviour, nature, and society.

What will you learn?

In the Master's programme in Human Geography and Sustainable Development, you will gain advanced knowledge in topics such as:

  • Green restructuring of industries, in both urban and rural areas
  • Urban and rural governance and planning
  • Climate change adaptation/mitigation, environmental degradation, and natural hazards
  • Global development, conflict, and migration
  • Natural resource management, land use, and environmental governance

You will develop your skills in critical thinking, analysis and academic writing. You will have the opportunity to conduct fieldwork abroad or in Norway. You will learn how to plan and carry out collection and analysis of empirical data to form the basis for your Master’s thesis.  

You will learn how to write a research report within given time and resource limits.

Student life

At the Department of Geography, you will join an academic environment where both physical and human geographers are strongly represented, offering a unique interdisciplinary setting. As a master's student, you get access to a reading room at the department, and close contact with fellow students and professionals. Our social environment is informal and international.

The programme has teaching in the form of lectures, seminar groups, laboratory and practical exercises, field courses and fieldwork. In addition, you must leave plenty of time for self-study and writing of the master's thesis.

You can conduct your fieldwork in Norway or abroad at the end of the first year. It usually lasts 4–8 weeks, and you complete your 60 ECTS thesis in the second year.

Career

Typical jobs for human geographers include urban and local planning, regional development and environmental management within the public and private sectors. Many also work in organizations or NGOs, at home and abroad. Others have a career in consulting, research, or in the education sector.

Geographers have an interdisciplinary background that makes them suitable for working in teams with people from different professional backgrounds. They have rigorous methodological training and are effective at problem solving and report writing.

Read interviews with former students
Admission requirements and how to apply
Grade requirements: C (2.5)
Requires a minimum average grade of Norwegian grade C (2,5) or the equivalent, to be eligible for admission.

Students with citizenship from countries outside the EU/EEA/Switzerland must pay tuition fees. Some applicants may be exempted from this rule.

To apply for the Master’s Programme in Geographies of Sustainable Development you need a Bachelor’s degree of 3-4 years’ duration, or an equivalent educational background. The degree must include at least 1.5 years (80-90 ECTS) of full-time studies in geography, or other relevant background such as environmental studies, development studies or political ecology with a social science perspective. 

Application deadlines:
Follow these links to find the general entry requirements and guidelines on how to apply:

Teaching language

Teaching language: English

Study structure

The programme covers two academic years (four semesters), and starts in the autumn.  


First semester

Mandatory:

GEO320 – Theory of Science and Research Design for Human Geographers (10 ECTS)

Choose two of the following courses:

GEO317 – Special Topics in Geography (10 ECTS) 
GEO318 – Hydrology, Groundwater and water-related Geohazards (10 ECTS)
GEO328 –  Planning and Place Development (10 ECTS) (taught in Norwegian)
GEO330 – Theories of Sustainable Land Use (10 ECTS)

Milestone 1: Presentation of project description


Second semester

GEO306 –Methods in Human Geography (10 ECTS)

GEO324 –   Human Geographies of Adaptation to Climate Change (10 ECTS) or GEO337 –  Political Ecology: Critical Perspectives on Environmental Governance  (10 ECTS)

Choose one of the following courses:

GEO316 – Practical Skills in Remote Sensing and Spatial Analysis (10 ECTS)
GEO317 – Special Topic in Geography (10 ECTS)
GEO324 –   Human Geographies of Adaptation to Climate Change (10 ECTS) or GEO337 –  Political Ecology: Critical Perspectives on Environmental Governance  (10 ECTS)

Milestone 2: Presentation of theory, research design and fieldwork plans


Third semester

You carry out fieldwork and write your Master’s thesis (GEO350)  

Milestone 3: Poster presentation of data, main findings and methodology


Fourth semester

You complete your Master’s thesis (GEO350, 60 ECTS). Submission 1st June

 

Study plan for students admitted to the programme before 2026

Study abroad

During your studies, you can choose to go on exchange studies to Iceland, Netherlands, UK, Sweden, or Germany, amongst other options. Exchange studies are usually completed in the second semester. 

The application deadline is 25 August in the first semester.

See exchange agreements

Further studies

With a master's degree in geography, you can apply for admission to the research programme and take a doctoral degree (PhD).
You can also become a teacher if you have 60 credits in a teaching subject that UiB offers didactics in and take a year of PPU.

Questions about the study?

Phone number: +47 55 58 30 73
E-mail: studieveileder.geog@uib.no
Study plan

A study plan is a formal document between you as a student and the University of Bergen. The study plan must provide a clear framework for the study, describe the learning goals you will achieve and how the study is structured.

Study plan for Master's Programme in Human Geography and Sustainable Development