Climate Futures: Science, Society and Politics MSc
Leeds, United Kingdom
DURATION
12 Months
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
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EARLIEST START DATE
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TUITION FEES
GBP 26,000 **
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* international applicants: 30 July 2023 – UK applicants: 10 September 2023
** UK: £12,500 – international: £26,000
Scholarships
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Introduction
Climate change has become one of the most defining crises of our time, affecting every corner of the world. From extreme weather to food and water insecurity, the future of our planet relies on qualified specialists to deliver solutions to help combat these problems.
Our Climate Futures Masters will provide you with a holistic understanding of the climate crisis, delivering the scientific, social and political approaches you’ll need to respond creatively and effectively to the unprecedented, complex and dynamic challenges of a changing climate.
The transdisciplinary design of this course means you’ll be engaging with multiple perspectives from world-leading climate experts across the University— giving you a comprehensive and extensive skill set that’ll enable you to challenge failed strategies and provide innovative solutions going forward. You’ll be taught by academics and researchers who are dedicated to providing climate solutions and are directly engaged in a wide variety of groundbreaking research surrounding the climate crisis, meaning you’ll be at the helm of innovations as they happen.
Here at Leeds, we also offer a uniquely active, immersive learning experience with the chance to put theory into practice and get involved in exciting, climate-based projects across the campus, city and beyond.
This means that, once you graduate, you’ll be equipped with the in-depth knowledge, skills and practical experience that’ll empower you to contribute towards meaningful climate action and pursue a challenging yet rewarding career that contributes to sustainable paths for our future.
Learning and teaching
The programme will adopt a blended approach to learning, developing digital offerings alongside immersive face-to-face teaching.
You'll be provided with the basic material you’ll need to give you the core level of knowledge and understanding needed for the course, no matter what your background, followed up with digital materials to assess your own level of learning.
Traditional lecture-style content will be delivered digitally (e.g., as screencasts) and through the reinforcement of clearly structured core preparatory reading that maps onto the online and face-to-face activities directly. Your time with teaching staff will be spent in face-to-face group sessions, including research skills & Continuing Professional Development (CPD) tutorials, challenge-based workshops (e.g. seminars, debates, hackathons, discussions), practical work (e.g. laboratory work, fieldwork and computer-based sessions) and oral/poster presentations.
Recognising the diversity in student backgrounds, learning will be supported with opt-in drop-in sessions to offer additional help with academic skills, as well as opt-in blended delivery of employability-related training.
Specialist facilities and resources
As a university, we are heavily involved in sustainability and tackling climate change, which means we have a range of specialist facilities and industry-grade equipment, much of which is used to inform our research.
Through our programme of immersive teaching, you’ll engage with our observational and experimental facilities; such as farms, woodlands, rewilding projects, renewable energy projects, remote and in-situ instrumentation operated in conjunction with the National Centre for Atmospheric Science and our outdoor centre situated in the Yorkshire Dales National Park. You’ll also have access to the Atmosphere and Critical Zone Observatory, laboratories and high-performance computation too.
Our Virtual Learning Environment will help to support your studies: it’s a central place where you can find all the information and resources for the School, your programme and modules.
You can also benefit from support to develop your academic skills, within the curriculum and through online resources, workshops, one-to-one appointments and drop-in sessions.
Active research environment
Learn from and work with the experts. The University of Leeds is home to several world-leading research institutes on climate change and sustainability, working to tackle the planet’s most pressing environmental challenges. Throughout your degree, you'll be taught by leaders in their fields and will be directly engaged with their cutting-edge research.
Academics and researchers teaching this course are based in or working with:
- Priestley International Centre for Climate Change, a world-leading centre for policy-relevant, solution-driven climate research advising the vast majority of UK Government departments, large corporations, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, UN climate negotiations (UNFCCC COPs), including Action for Climate Empowerment, i.e. on climate change education, training and public participation.
- Place-based Climate Action Network, working to deliver climate policies on a global to local scale and the Centre for Global Development which addresses the transformation of human societies in response to critical global challenges such as poverty, inequality and climate change.
- Transformational projects on climate and environmental action, such as Living Labs, Sustainability Service and Geosolutions.
- United Bank of Carbon and the White Rose Forest who are protecting, planting and restoring trees and forests both in the UK and across the world.
- Climate Commissions for Leeds and Yorkshire and Humber, which bring together public, private and third sector stakeholders to facilitate ambitious steps towards a low carbon, climate-resilient future.
- Centre for Global Security Challenges, which fosters interdisciplinary links across the university around the theme of security as it relates to issues including climate change, global health and political violence.
- The National Centre for Atmospheric Science and Centre for Polar Observation and Modelling, both based in Leeds and two of only six research centres funded by the Natural Environment Research Council, provide their core research into atmospheric and polar research.
- Institute for Climate and Atmospheric Science, which is the UK’s most diverse academic institute for atmospheric research, and the UK Met Office, which provides concrete meteorological information for making short and long-term decisions on environmental resilience.
Programme team
The wider programme team is made up of experts from a variety of relevant disciplines such as climate science, social studies and politics.
In this course, you’ll be taught by our expert academics, from lecturers to professors. You may also be taught by industry professionals with years of experience, as well as trained postgraduate researchers, connecting you to some of the brightest minds on campus.
Program Outcome
Why study at Leeds:
- Graduate with a transdisciplinary MSc that covers the scientific, social and political areas of climate from a university which is actively taking action on climate change.
- Learn the latest insights in diverse aspects of climate change and sustainability from the research conducted across the several world-leading institutes right here on campus, which feeds directly into the course.
- Advance your knowledge and skills in critical areas such as the societal challenges connected to climate change, the natural science describing the climatic change, the history of climatology and the social and political dimensions of climate as a problem.
- Tailor your degree to suit your career aspirations and interests with a selection of topical yet diverse optional modules, giving you the flexibility to shape the course to your preferences.
- Develop your individual and team skills in real-world challenge-based activities that give you the chance to pursue your specific interests and grow your professional network through engagement with our private and public sector contacts.
- Discover cutting-edge science, the latest perspectives and innovative solutions from leading climate researchers, professionals (e.g. policy makers/advisors, activists, organisations) and impacted communities in talks and seminars across campus.
- Take your own action against climate change throughout the course and get hands-on in exciting and transformational projects including our Living Labs, new woodlands and rewilding initiatives, the Sustainability Service, Atmosphere and Critical Zone Observatory, Geosolutions, the centre for Advanced Research Computing and the Leeds Climate Commission.
- Experience expert theoretical and practical teaching, delivered by a programme team who are actively working to tackle the planet’s most pressing environmental challenges.
- Join one of our societies, such as SusSoc, where you can meet like-minded people at events such as socials and sports.
Curriculum
This course will equip you with the transdisciplinary knowledge and tools to become facilitators of innovative climate action. The course breaks new ground in the race to understand, mitigate and adapt to twenty-first-century climate change.
Through our programme of active learning, you’ll engage with multiple perspectives from world-leading climate experts across campus, directly tapping into the unique depth and breadth of climate research at the University of Leeds. You'll acquire a trailblazing ability to see and tackle climate-posed problems from multiple angles, becoming a holistic, strategic thinker, uniquely equipped to facilitate transformative action. No pre-requisite knowledge is required for this course.
Semester one
Semester one provides an interdisciplinary landing platform for you to begin your journey into the complexities and challenges of climate change as a whole. Diversity in students’ experiences and knowledge will be celebrated, adding breadth to your existing knowledge and skill base, while building on your current expertise.
Teaching this semester will equip you with the core conceptual, empirical and analytical skills in social, political and natural science disciplines required to undertake subsequent specialist modules. This will include a residential field course that will immerse you in practical climate-based solutions, building strong relationships with your peers and instructors and practising core transdisciplinary knowledge and skills. The rest of the semester will be devoted to following up on this knowledge with drop-in skills workshops and two compulsory 30-credit modules.
Semester two
The second semester is geared around problem-based learning, provoking you to start creating your own innovative approaches to challenges posed by climate change. You'll select two modules from a choice of 30-credit electives based on the outcomes you want to achieve and the roles you want to play in addressing climate change. These modules will build on the interdisciplinary foundation already established to directly address transdisciplinary themes from the public, private or third sectors, and achieve deeper specialisation within chosen topics.
Semester three
In Semester three, the capstone project equips you to actively address a climate challenge with mentorship from an interdisciplinary team. The module is designed to guide you through building a track record in identifying and enacting positive solutions in a team while developing and showcasing your unique individual strengths and professional skills.
Fieldwork
Residential fieldwork in the UK will immerse you in multi-disciplinary methods, languages and cultures. Embedded in the physical, social and political sciences, the course will foster effective communication and collaboration between individuals, maximising different strengths and backgrounds.
You'll undertake observational and experimental activities to characterise environmental conditions and will conduct social science research into interventions for acting on climate change, including related policy and planning processes, and public acceptance issues.
Additional fieldwork will continue the programme of experiential learning. This will give you further opportunities to specialise in using industry-grade equipment and cutting-edge approaches to understanding and communicating climate change as a natural and social challenge, for example in conjunction with the University of Leeds farm and woodlands, renewable energy and transport infrastructure projects, and various conservation/re-wilding projects.
Course structure
The list shown below represents typical modules/components studied and may change from time to time.
Compulsory modules
The compulsory modules will develop your core practical and critical analytical skills and methods in social, political and natural sciences to enable deeper cross-disciplinary specialisation later in the course. Learning in the Semester one modules will be kept in step, and the topics will be regularly bridged, through the residential field course and interdisciplinary challenge-based workshops as part of the 60-credit capstone project module.
- Physical Climate Change, Impacts and Mitigation [30 credits]
- Social and Political Dimensions of the Climate Challenge [30 credits]
- Climate Futures Project: Visions for Transformative Change [60 credits]
Optional modules
You’ll study any two of the following four optional modules, each exploring a particular perspective on the climate challenge facing society today. This will build on the breadth of knowledge, approaches and methods gained in semester one, providing more focused subject specialism and expertise. You’ll engage with specific case studies to learn about the underpinning scientific, social and political concepts, covering the response of the natural world to climate change, relevant climate technologies and communications, social mobilisations and issues of policy and governance. No pre-requisite knowledge is required for any of these modules.
- Climate Risk [30 credits]
- Climate Security [30 credits]
- Climate and Development [30 credits]
- Climate Justice [30 credits]
Admissions
Career Opportunities
The climate crisis has become one of the greatest challenges of our time. It’s a multidimensional problem that needs to be treated as such to reach holistic solutions for the future.
Because this MSc takes a transdisciplinary approach, you’ll have a broad knowledge base surrounding the three critical areas needed to tackle climate change: climate science, social studies and political systems/theories. You’ll also be equipped with lifelong skills for collaborative problem-solving and teamwork. The sheer scope of skills and understanding you’ll learn could give you the edge when you graduate and open a lot of doors in terms of career opportunities in the industry.
From research to media communications, governmental institutions to NGOs, your specialist yet transferable skill set means you won’t be limited to just one career path choice – with the potential to make a real difference to the future of the world.
Here are some examples of the job roles that could be available to you when you graduate:
- Climate Science Advisors
- Policy Officers
- Civil Service Social Researchers and Analysts
- Stakeholder and Community Engagement Officers
- Corporate Social Responsibility Officers
- Communications Officers/Managers
- Environmental Campaigners
- Educators and teachers
- Partnership Managers
- Supply Chain Managers
- Risk Managers
- Project and Programme Managers