South Stack lighthouse on Anglesey

Geography

POSTGRADUATE RESEARCH SUBJECT AREA

Find out about the research opportunities in Geography

Why Study Geography?

  • Top 30 in the UK for Geography Education (Times/Sunday Times Good University Guide 2018)

Our graduates are highly employable (THE, 2019) because we give our students a broad, integrative geographical knowledge and the key competencies we teach (problem solving, critical and analytical thinking) set our graduates apart. Our courses offer the opportunity to study a broad range of human, physical and environmental topics, but also to become well-trained in a range of research methods (field and laboratory). Geographers acquire specialised technical and practical as well as transferrable and professional skills. 

Our staff are research-active, and they will share their passion for the subject and knowledge with you. Our modules reflect staff interests, and these topics include rivers/coastal environments, rural-urban areas, social inequalities, geohazards, governance, environmental modelling, oceanography, sedimentology or sustainability.  

Our large team is involved in cutting edge research with other academic institutions, non-governmental groups and communities across the globe. In addition, the Geography team have fantastic links and are involved in engagement activities with local groups and schools across the UK; we champion science in society. We are also situated within one of the most beautiful places to study Geography, with Snowdonia National Park on our doorstep. Bangor University could not offer a more stimulating and lively environment in which to study Geography.

Career Opportunities in Geography

A degree in Geography opens up a wide range of career paths and job types. Our geographers have an integrative perspective of social and natural sciences, and this distinguishes them from other disciplines. They possess a combination of transferrable skills making them very employable. Graduates go on to work as environmental consultants, town/emergency planners, teachers, surveyors, sustainability/recycling officers, data analysts, or GIS officers/cartographers. They also take on roles in business, finance and human resources, or marketing, PR and sales. Employers include the Civil Service, local government, charities/NGOs, environmental protection agencies or consultancies, and private companies.

Our Research in Geography

We have a multidisciplinary team of staff, their expertise ranges from glacial to marine environments, and from food geographies to rewilding. Our staff are involved in leading research with other academic institutions, non-governmental groups and communities across the globe. Staff interests include: riverine pollution, arctic warming, coastal hazards, nature and society, food poverty, submarine sedimentary systems, and the culture of enthusiasm. Our staff are active in the following areas of research;

Geography research at Bangor University covers both human and physically aligned work, with a strong interdisciplinarity and applied focus, addressing policy issues and conducting action research with stakeholder groups.

We work in a range of contexts internationally, studying processes and interactions at a range of scales – from global to regional, through to site-specific cases.

Topics covered encompass:

  • Rural land-use change and controversies (e.g. Brexit & rewilding)
  • Sustainable communities, tourism and eco-developments (e.g. food festivals & nature-based approaches)
  • Human-nature relations and environmental governance (e.g. payments for ecosystem services & social forestry)
  • Food values, justice and poverty (e.g. food banks & redistribution networks)
  • Participatory approaches, citizen science and knowledge-politics (from mobile based surveys to post-truth debates)
  • Long-term river response to environmental change
  • Geoarchaeology of alluvial environments
  • Process geomorphology
  • Reconstruction of terrestrial glacial environments
  • Catchment Science and Modelling
  • Alluvial Geochemistry and impact of PHEs on river systems.
Related Subject Areas

You may also be interested in these related subject areas.

Related Subject Areas

You may also be interested in these related subject areas.