Subject overview

View our media gallery
Geography at Sussex is ranked in the top 20 in the UK in The Sunday Times University Guide 2012, in the top 30 in the UK in The Complete University Guide 2014.
Sussex is ranked in the top 100 universities in the world for geography in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2013.
In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) we were the highest ranked department of comparable size, and came 13th overall, with 95 per cent of our research rated as internationally recognised or higher.
Geographical research at Sussex is characterised by its international focus, its openness to the full range of philosophical and methodological approaches, and its relevance to policy and industry.
Geography at Sussex has strong interdisciplinary links. The Department is located within the School of Global Studies, which brings together fields of study such as anthropology, development studies, geography and international relations. The School houses a number of interdisciplinary research clusters, including geomorphology and climate change.
- Specialist facilities
-
The University offers extensive computing facilities with a full range of data-processing and communications software. Office space is usually allocated to students taking research degrees. You will have full access to the University’s main Library and its online collection, and to the British Library of Development Studies at the Institute of Development Studies (IDS), which is located on the Sussex campus.
Geography at Sussex has its own vehicles for field trips, specialist cartographic facilities and a well-equipped Physical Geography Laboratory.
Programmes
- PhD in Geography
- MPhil in Geography
All research students are required to complete an appropriate programme of research methods training. This may involve enrolling on the MSc in Social Research Methods – a stand-alone Masters degree – before proceeding to a PhD. This is known as a 1+3 degree.
Students who have already completed a programme of research methods training can apply for the basic, three-year doctoral degree leading to a PhD.
Applications for research degrees are welcomed across any of our research clusters, each of which maintains a strong international reputation with world-leading research recognised in the 2008 RAE.
Geographers also provide interdisciplinary doctoral supervision in subject areas such as colonial and postcolonial studies, contemporary European studies, development studies and migration studies.
Coursework and supervision
Whether you start the three-year PhD or the 1+3 MSc/PhD degree, you will normally be required to complete some research methods training modules and possibly some specialist thematic modules drawn from the MSc degrees.
You will be allocated two academic supervisors with whom you work for the duration of your research degree. These are allocated according to their regional and thematic expertise, to provide a complementary ‘match’ with your research.
Recent thesis titles
An evaluation of GIS as a countryside management tool to inform the creation of a large-scale, near-forest habitat network in West Sussex
Black and white collaborative politics in South African Christian student movements 1907- 1978
Botanic gardens: ‘walled, stranded arks’ or environments for learning
Cities in motion: towards an understanding of the cinematic city
Ecotourism, institutions and livelihoods: a study of North Rupununi, Guyana
Food crop marketing and local economic development in Eastern Cape Province, South Africa
Gains, losses and changes: resettlement of Somali refugees in London and Toronto
Institutional needs for natural resource conservation in mountain areas
Media, imagination and migration: the role of Italian television in the Albanian migration to Italy
Pastoral-farmer conflict in the Hadejia-Nguru wetlands of north-eastern Nigeria
Rainfall variability and extremes over southern Africa
Representations of diversity and cultural participation: performances of multiculturalism in Bologna and Barcelona
Sediment transport in the Ouse-Newhaven Estuary
The global-local interplay and foreign direct investment in the European Union
The internationalisation of productive capital: Korean textile and clothing foreign direct investment in China
The migration and transition of Sierra Leonean refugee girls in England
The response of shingle beaches to storm events: a managed approach
Threats to coastal shingle biodiversity in the Rives Manche
Entry requirements
- MPhil in Geography
-
UK entrance requirements
A first- or upper second-class undergraduate honours degree in any relevant social science, but applicants from other backgrounds may be considered. Applicants should submit an outline (two to three pages) of their research interests.
Overseas entrance requirements
If your country is not listed below, please contact the University at E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
Country Overseas qualification Australia Bachelor (Honours) degree with second-class upper division Brazil Bacharel, Licenciado or professional title with a final mark of at least 8 Canada Bachelor degree with CGPA 3.3/4.0 (grade B+) China Bachelor degree from a leading university with overall mark of 75%-85% depending on your university Cyprus Bachelor degree or Ptychion with a final mark of at least 7.5 France Licence with mention bien or Maîtrise with final mark of at least 13 Germany Bachelor degree or Magister Artium with a final mark of 2.4 or better Ghana Bachelor degree from a public university with second-class upper division Greece Ptychion from an AEI with a final mark of at least 7.5 Hong Kong Bachelor (Honours) degree with second-class upper division India Bachelor degree from a leading institution with overall mark of at least 60% or equivalent Iran Bachelor degree (Licence or Karshenasi) with a final mark of at least 15 Italy Diploma di Laurea with an overall mark of at least 105 Japan Bachelor degree from a leading university with a minumum average of B+ or equivalent Malaysia Bachelor degree with class 2 division 1 Mexico Licenciado with a final mark of at least 8 Nigeria Bachelor degree with second-class upper division or CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 Pakistan Four-year bachelor degree, normally with a GPA of at least 3.3 Russia Magistr or Specialist Diploma with a minimum average mark of at least 4 South Africa Bachelor (Honours) degree or Bachelor degree in Technology with an overall mark of at least 70% Saudi Arabia Bachelor degree with an overall mark of at least 70% or CGPA 3.5/5.0 or equivalent South Korea Bachelor degree from a leading university with CGPA of at least 3.5/4.0 or equivalent Spain Licenciado with a final mark of at least 2/4 Taiwan Bachelor degree with overall mark of 70%-85% depending on your university Thailand Bachelor degree with CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 or equivalent Turkey Lisans Diplomasi with CGPA of at least 3.0/4.0 depending on your university United Arab Emirates Bachelor degree with CGPA of at least 3.5/4.0 or equivalent USA Bachelor degree with CGPA 3.3-3.5/4.0 depending on your university Vietnam Masters degree with CGPA 3.5/4.0 or equivalent If you have any questions about your qualifications after consulting our overseas qualifications, contact the University at E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
English language requirements
IELTS 6.5, with not less than 6.5 in Writing and 6.0 in the other sections. Internet TOEFL with 88 overall, with at least 20 in Listening, 20 in Reading, 22 in Speaking and 24 in Writing.
For more information, refer to English language requirements.
Additional admissions information
If you are a non-EEA student you must obtain clearance by the UK Government Academic Technology Approval Scheme (ATAS) for this degree. Please ensure you allow sufficient time for your university application to be considered and processed in time for you to apply for ATAS clearance and your Tier 4 visa.
- PhD in Geography
-
UK entrance requirements
The normal requirement is a Masters degree in geography or a related subject, but applicants from other backgrounds may be considered. Applicants should submit an outline research proposal indicating the nature, ambitions and primary questions of the research project.
Overseas entrance requirements
If you are an international student and wish to find out if you have the necessary qualifications for this degree, please refer to Overseas qualifications.
English language requirements
IELTS 6.5, with not less than 6.5 in Writing and 6.0 in the other sections. Internet TOEFL with 88 overall, with at least 20 in Listening, 20 in Reading, 22 in Speaking and 24 in Writing.
For more information, refer to English language requirements.
Additional admissions information
If you are a non-EEA student you must obtain clearance by the UK Government Academic Technology Approval Scheme (ATAS) for this degree. Please ensure you allow sufficient time for your university application to be considered and processed in time for you to apply for ATAS clearance and your Tier 4 visa.
Visas and immigration
Find out more about Visas and immigration.
For more information about the admissions process at Sussex
For pre-application enquiries:
Student Recruitment Services
T +44 (0)1273 876787
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
For post-application enquiries:
Postgraduate Admissions,
University of Sussex,
Sussex House, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877773
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E pg.applicants@sussex.ac.uk
Related subjects
Fees and funding
Fees
- MPhil in Geography
-
Home UK/EU students: £3,9001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £3,9002
Overseas students: £13,00031 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
- PhD in Geography
-
Home UK/EU students: £3,9001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £3,9002
Overseas students: £13,00031 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
To find out about your fee status, living expenses and other costs, visit further financial information.
Funding
The funding sources listed below are for the subject area you are viewing and may not apply to all degrees listed within it. Please check the description of the individual funding source to make sure it is relevant to your chosen degree.
To find out more about funding and part-time work, visit further financial information.
Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust for Postgraduate Study (2014)
Region: UK
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)
Application deadline: 1 October 2013
The Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust are offering bursaries to Postgraduate students following any postgraduate degree courses in any subject.
Sussex ESRC 1+3 and +3 Scholarships (2014)
Region: UK, Europe (Non UK)
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)
Application deadline: 28 February 2014
Up to 22 1+3 and +3 awards across the social sciences
Faculty interests
Geography faculty enjoy reputations for world-leading academic research as well as policy-relevant studies on global socioeconomic and cultural transformations, and on climate change and geomorphology. Our research includes a number of projects funded by UK Research Councils such as the ESRC, AHRC and NERC, as well as major contributions to policy debates within the UK Government, the EU, other international organisations and industry.
The research clusters in Geography are described below. For more information, visit the Department of Geography.
- Climate
-
In recent years, the spectre of anthropogenic climate change has thrust climate science into the centre of current political and public debates. Climate science is now directly informing policies on how we fuel our economy, which will affect all our lives. The Department contributes to this agenda through research to improve our understanding of fundamental climate processes within the earth system and climate impacts on our life-support systems.
We focus on climate change and the global water cycle, the role of mineral dust aerosols in the climate system, the role of terrestrial ecosystems in the climate system, and human dimensions of climate change.
Associated Geography faculty include:
Dr Mick Frogley Quaternary palaeoecology, and climatic history of lake basins.
Professor Dominic Kniveton Climate systems, and the hydrological cycle in Southern Africa.
Professor Julian Murton Permafrost, physical modelling, and Quaternary environments in Arctic Canada and UK.
Dr David Ockwell Transitions to a low-carbon economy; economics, politics and ecology of fire management in Cape York, Australia.
Dr Pedram Rowhani Climate change impacts on ecosystems, food security, conflict.
Professor Martin Todd The role of mineral dust in the climate system, the impact of climate change on hydrological and ecological systems.
Dr Yi Wang Climate change and earth systems science.
- Economic geographies of globalisation and development
-
This research cluster focuses on global value chains, developing country industrialisation, industrial change and regional economic performance, the nature and impact of the emergence of China, and spatial price formation.
Research on regional inequality and regional economic performance has focused on regional economic performance in Europe, including governance and cohesion in an enlarged Europe. Current plans centre on an extension of this research to a comparative study of the EU and China. We are working on an ESRC-funded project in partnership with the Chinese Academy of Sciences on EU-China links and regional development in China.
Our research on global value chains involves close relationships with the research of the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) Globalisation Group. Scope exists for joint supervision with IDS. Refer to the development studies subject area.
Associated Geography faculty include:
Professor Mick Dunford Comparative regional and urban economic performance; inequality and social cohesion in Europe; and theories of regulation.
- Geographies of migration
-
This cluster constitutes the core of the Sussex Centre for Migration Research. It is a unique venue for migration research in Britain, centred on creating a close-knit, interdisciplinary environment for faculty and graduate researchers alike, and linking research with its well-established MA in Migration Studies.
Highlights of this research effort have included a six-year ‘Development Research Centre’, funded by the Department for International Development, on the relationship between migration, globalisation and poverty; research on issues of integration, social cohesion and identity among migrants to the UK; and extensive research on migration issues in Europe. The group also supervises a number of doctoral students working on migration issues around the world.
The Centre is home to the internationally established Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies, edited by Professor Russell King. Sussex is one of the main agenda-setting centres outside the US for journal-based empirical research on all aspects of migration.
Associated faculty include:
Dr Mike Collyer Migration policy, refugees and asylum, and Europe and North Africa.
Professor Russell King International migration in Europe, rural geography, the Mediterranean, and islands.
Professor Ben Rogaly Labour geographies; class and community; identity, place and belonging; temporary migrant workers.
Professor Ronald Skeldon Population migration in the developing world, especially Asia.
Dr Katie Walsh The intersection of migration, home and belonging; transnational spaces and identities; British expatriates; and Gulf region.
- Geomorphology
-
This research cluster focuses on modelling and monitoring of sensitive earth-surface and atmospheric systems. The study of sensitive systems such as mountains, coasts, the atmosphere and the arctic is becoming critical to societies, as they adjust to the impacts of environmental change. Our research investigates sensitive systems by field monitoring, physical and numerical modelling, geotechnical analysis of sediments and rocks, and reconstruction of Quaternary environments.
Our expertise concerns:
- climate systems
- coastal and estuarine systems
- dryland systems
- permafrost and Arctic systems
- Quaternary palaeoenvironments
- slopes and landslides systems, and
- soil systems.
Key achievements
Recognition for the high quality of our research has led to several recent achievements:
- papers in Nature, Science, Geology and Geophysical Research Letters
- grants: more than £3.5 million (for example from the EU, INTERREG, Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, NERC, Royal Society, Environment Agency)
- Beaches At Risk project – a showcase Franco-British project
- Chair of NERC Grant-awarding panel
- Chair of the British Society for Geomorphology
- associate editor of Journal of Geophysical Research – Earth Surface, and
- Dorothy Hodgkins Royal Society Research Fellowship to a former PhD student.
Associated faculty include:
Dr John Barlow Geospatial mapping and image analysis.
Professor Roger Moore Coastal instability and erosion, slopes and landslides, geohazard risk, subsea geomorphology.
Dr Cherith Moses Rock weathering; coastal processes; and karst landforms in the British Isles, the Mediterranean Basin and Australia.
Professor Julian Murton Permafrost, physical modelling, and Quaternary environments in Arctic Canada and UK.
Dr David Ockwell Transitions to a low-carbon economy; economics, politics and ecology of fire management in Cape York, Australia.
Dr David Robinson Rock weathering, coastal processes, soil erosion and conservation, and landform evolution.
Geomorphology at Sussex has close links with industry including collaboration through Halcrow Ltd, Royal Haskoning Ltd, Arup, Mott MacDonald and other consultants.
Industry collaborators
Arup
Mathew Free Geological hazards and tsunamis.
Jason Manning Remote sensing.BP
Chris Martin Engineering geology and drylands.
Halcrow Group Ltd
Jon Carey Site investigation and landslides.
Paul Fish Quaternary geology and GIS.
Gayle Hough Marine geology and sedimentology.
Andy Mills Fluvial and upland geomorphology.Mott MacDonald
Peter Phipps Terrain analysis, coastal and drylands.
Royal Haskoning Ltd
David Brew Coastal geomorphology.
Nick Cooper Coastal planning and engineering.
Mike Walkden Coastal modelling.Consultants
Mark Lee Landslide risk and geohazards.
David Norbury Engineering geology. - Histories, cultures, networks
-
This cluster centres around space and place in colonial and postcolonial worlds. Research is orchestrated around two interdisciplinary research centres: the Centre for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies and the Centre for World Environmental History.
Associated faculty include:
Dr Grace Carswell Rural livelihoods in eastern Africa, population-environment interactions, agricultural change under the influence of colonialism, and rural change in South India.
Professor Alan Lester The historical geographies of the 19th-century British Empire, and of South Africa, Australia and New Zealand; histories of humanitarianism and ‘race’.
Dr Simon Rycroft Radical urban cultures in the 1960s, the analysis of such cultures from a counter/cultural perspective showing how they engage with ‘nature’, 20th-century cosmologies.
Dr Katie Walsh The intersection of migration, home and belonging; transnational spaces and identities; British expatriates; and Gulf region.
Careers and perspectives
Our research degrees provide a strong intellectual grounding and sophisticated analytical skills appropriate to a wide variety of careers in the academic and policy fields, and in the private sector. Our graduates have also gone on to careers such as teaching and tutoring.
For more information, visit Careers and alumni.
School and contacts
School of Global Studies
The School of Global Studies aims to provide one of the UK's premier venues for understanding how the world is changing. It offers a broad range of perspectives on global issues, and staff and students are actively engaged with a wide range of international and local partners, contributing a distinctive perspective on global affairs.
School of Global Studies,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SJ, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877686
E globalpg@sussex.ac.uk
Department of Geography
Postgraduate Open Day 2013
4 December 2013, 1pm-4pm
Bramber House, University of Sussex
- talk to academic faculty and current postgraduate students
- subject talks and presentations on postgraduate study, research and funding
- choose from our exciting range of taught Masters and research degrees
- find out how postgraduate study can improve your career prospects
- get details of our excellent funding schemes for taught postgraduate study.
To register your interest in attending, visit Postgraduate Open Day.
Can’t make it to our Postgraduate Open Day? You might be interested in attending one of our Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions.
Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions
If you can’t make it to our Postgraduate Open Day, you’re welcome to attend one of our Discover Postgraduate Study information sessions. These are held in the spring and summer terms and enable you to find out more about postgraduate study and the opportunities Sussex has to offer.
Visit Discover Postgraduate study to book your place.
Other ways to visit Sussex
We run weekly guided campus tours every Wednesday afternoon, year round. Book a place online at Visit us and Open Days.
You are also welcome to visit the University independently without any pre-arrangement.
