Geography and Italian (2014 entry)

BA, 4 years, UCAS: LR7Y
Typical A level offer: AAB

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Subject overview

Why geography?

Geographers study the earth’s landscapes, people and environment, and bridge the social sciences (human geography) and natural sciences (physical geography). Focused on key global issues such as climate change, economic and cultural diversity and international migration, geography is concerned with explaining difference and how places can be transformed by both natural processes and human action. It is no surprise that geographers are at the forefront of fields such as environmental planning and the management of natural resources, as well as contributing to many other areas of public life.

University-level geography will equip you with the skills and knowledge to work in a global labour market.

Why geography at Sussex? 

Excellence in teaching: Sussex is ranked in the top 100 in the world for geography in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2013Geography at Sussex is ranked in the top 20 in the UK in The Sunday Times University Guide 2012 and in the top 30 in the UK in The Complete University Guide 2014.

Excellence in research: all of our faculty are research active in their chosen fields of expertise. In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), Geography at Sussex was ranked as one of the top 13 departments nationally. 

Career opportunities: by encouraging intellectual curiosity and cultural agility, the School of Global Studies, in which you will be based, enhances your employability (British Council and Think Global: Survey of Senior Business Leaders, 2011). 

Flexibility and choice: our courses are designed to let you develop your own interests as you progress – the choice of subjects increasing with each successive year – and you can mix and match human and physical geography options if you wish. 

Global scope: in addition to an internationally focused curriculum at Sussex, you will have the opportunity to study overseas at partner universities in North America, Europe, Asia, or Latin America, or to go on a work placement in your second year of study. 

Unique fieldtrip opportunities: we currently offer one of the most ambitious choices of fieldwork destinations of any UK geography department. In recent years, our students have visited California, Vietnam, Thailand, southern India, Dubai, China and the Seychelles. 

Great learning environment: our teaching and research facilities are first rate, and training takes place in the classroom, laboratory and in the field, and includes an understanding of geographical information systems (GIS), now a key public- and private-sector decision-making tool. 

Why languages?

The study of languages enables you to acquire excellent communication skills and enhance your understanding of your own and other cultures. Knowledge of a foreign language gives you access to the intellectual achievements and social developments of the countries where the target languages are spoken. In addition, the ability to speak a second language and the experience of having spent time studying or working abroad are major assets in the employment market. To quote Nelson Mandela: ‘If you talk to a man in a language he understands, that goes to his head. If you talk to him in his own language, that goes to his heart.’

Why languages at Sussex?

Intellectually stimulating courses with relevant practical applications.

Start post-A level and/or from beginner’s level at the appropriate standard.

Reach a high level of proficiency with the expert tuition of experienced language tutors.

Enjoy all the academic, social, personal and, ultimately, professional benefits of the year abroad, whether working, teaching or studying at a partner university.

Profit from studying alongside visiting and exchange students from continental Europe and beyond.

Sussex offers different ways to study languages: 

  • courses: we offer a single-honours course (two languages) and, in some subject areas, joint courses including a language with the choice of French, Italian or Spanish. All these courses are four years long and incorporate a third year abroad, studying or working in a foreign-language setting 
  • other opportunities to study a language: students on a wide range of non-language courses can gain proficiency in a variety of languages as one of the electives available within their course.

Other opportunities to study a language

Electives

The University is enhancing the opportunities it provides for you to broaden and enrich your studies through a new system of electives in single-honours subjects. Most subjects across the arts, sciences and social sciences are offering electives, the exceptions being where professional-body requirements do not provide sufficient space within the curriculum (eg law, accountancy, engineering). Under the electives system, you will be able to choose to spend 25 per cent of your time in your first and second year on a range of subjects.

Electives will either be offered as stand-alone modules you choose to broaden or enrich your studies, or as a specific named pathway over Years 1 and 2 (refer to Language as an elective below). Students successfully completing a named pathway will have this recorded on their degree certificate.

We are also developing new ‘pathways’ of electives, which will allow you to choose a series of electives that together make up a coherent strand of learning. We already have these in place for languages and teaching English as a foreign language, as explained on the right. We will be looking to create other pathways from the range of electives we offer for 2014. If you choose a pathway from the start of your course and complete the electives, you will be able to have this recorded as part of your final degree and transcript – giving added value to your studies and showing the skills and knowledge you have developed at Sussex. For the latest information on these elective pathways, visit Undergraduate courses 2014.

Language as an elective

As part of the electives system, we have developed a flexible language programme, allowing students on a wide range of single-honours courses to opt for the award of ‘... with proficiency in (a specific language)’ at intermediate or advanced level. This is recorded on your degree certificate, as a named part of your degree.

You take language electives as part of your course for two years. Depending on your prior level of study of your chosen language, you start at beginner’s level and progress to intermediate level, or start at intermediate level and progress to advanced level. To qualify for the ‘... with proficiency in (a specific language)’ award, you need to successfully complete the two-year programme in one language at intermediate or advanced level. As we offer languages from beginner’s level, there are no language entry requirements for this scheme.

For 2014 entry, the range of languages will include French, German, Italian, Spanish, Arabic, Japanese and Mandarin Chinese.

English Language Teaching as an elective

As well as modern foreign languages, we are also offering English Language Teaching as an elective, taken over Years 1 and 2. Students successfully completing this elective may obtain a professional qualification in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL). This qualification will significantly enhance your employability and future opportunities as a graduate.

Open language courses

If you are interested in learning a new language or improving your existing foreign-language skills outside the context of your chosen course, Sussex offers the opportunity to study a language on a weekly basis with other students, members of the University staff and the local community. You can choose from Arabic, British Sign Language, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Latin, Mandarin Chinese, Russian and Spanish classes. The majority of classes take place in the early evening. 

All of our open language courses offer the opportunity to develop language skills and to learn about the country and customs concerned. 

Independent language learning

The Language Learning Centre provides state-of-the-art technology that supports self-access language learning. Foreign-language newspapers and magazines are also available. Further information about these courses and tuition fees is available from the Open Course Office (email opencourses@sussex.ac.uk) or at the Sussex Centre for Language Studies.

Programme content

In this course you explore the relationships between culture and the environment, with particular emphasis on Europe within a global setting.

Year 1 modules introduce the core areas of geography and university-level language skills in your chosen language, set within its appropriate European social and cultural context. In Year 2, you take further modules from each subject, following your interests in geography and developing your language skills. You spend Year 3 at a mainland European university studying geography and taking modules relevant to the culture and society of the host country. In your final year, you can draw from a range of geography options and develop ideas relating to your geography undergraduate thesis, which requires research and presentation skills. In your language studies, you continue learning about the language, culture and society of your chosen country.

We continue to develop and update our modules for 2014 entry to ensure you have the best student experience. In addition to the course structure below, you may find it helpful to refer to the 2012 modules tab.

Core content

Year 1 

You are introduced to human and environmental geography, and some optional elements of physical geography. You study topics such as place, space and landscape • environmental management • environmental risks and hazards • development and inequality. In addition, you receive training in geographical and study skills 

Year 2 

You study two areas of human geography – cultural geography and social geography. You also choose from topics such as international migration • climate change science • development issues • GIS. You will develop skills in geographical data collection and analysis through specialist training and an exciting fieldtrip, overseas or in the UK 

Year 3 

You tailor your course towards your interests, choosing from topics such as population and development • land use • rural livelihoods • labour geography • globalisation and geopolitics • transnationalism and identity • climate change policy. You also undertake a research project 

How will I learn?

At Sussex we deliberately vary the mode of delivery of modules so that you experience different learning styles. Lectures and seminars might be combined with workshops, field work, tutorials or practical classes. Student-led seminars are features of some modules, as are small-group tutorials. Faculty also make extensive use of information technologies, making slides, audio podcasts and other lecture resources available for students to download from dedicated e-learning module websites.

Similarly, modes of assessment vary and – depending on the module taken – can include learning diaries, practical reports and small-group presentations, in combination with more conventional essays and unseen examinations.

For more information, visit Studying at Sussex.

What will I achieve?

  • knowledge and understanding of key geographical approaches to contemporary issues, from global to local scales
  • understanding of the nature of human and physical factors that shape places and environments, and the ways they are connected to, or distanced from, each other
  • ability to use geographical knowledge and understanding in the development of real solutions to global problems
  • experience of research-project design, fieldwork skills, data collection and analysis in human, physical and environmental geography
  • skills in written and oral communication, IT (for example, the use of GIS), numeracy, cartography and learning techniques
  • the ability to learn and reflect, abstract and synthesise material, reason clearly, judge evidence and evaluate theories.

We continue to develop and update our modules for 2014 entry to ensure you have the best student experience. In addition to the course structure below, you may find it helpful to refer to the 2012 modules tab.

Core content

Year 1

You study your target language(s), with the focus on accuracy and fluency in both speaking and writing. You can explore study skills that allow you to make the best of our well-equipped Language Learning Centre

Alongside language study you follow modules giving you an insight into the ideas and events that underpin modern society in the countries of Europe and beyond. What is it like to live and work in France, Italy and Spain today? What place does Europe have within the wider international context and what are the attitudes of Europeans towards their own countries, Britain, the rest of Europe and the world beyond?

You are also introduced to aspects of cultural difference. What is culture? What part does cultural competence play in communication between speakers of different mother tongues? 

Year 2

Your language study becomes more demanding, with the focus on high levels of competence in tasks such as giving oral presentations, writing reports, summarising spoken and written texts, writing book and film reviews, and holding meetings and discussions. The advanced study of your language prepares you for your third year abroad. In addition to your language study, you explore cultural, political, historical, literary and social aspects of countries in and beyond Europe where French, Italian or Spanish are spoken. You also learn about language in use and consider ways in which language is affected by differing social contexts. How does language reflect culture? How do we signal politeness, formality, irony, etc in English? How does this compare with other languages? What issues do such questions raise for translation and mediation between cultures? You have the opportunity to investigate these and other related areas

Year 3

Your third year is spent abroad, studying at one of our partner universities, on a work placement or as a teaching assistant in a school

Year 4

You take language modules including an introduction to the vocational skills of translation and interpreting. You will also develop and deepen your knowledge of relevant social or cultural issues through the study of special subjects 

How will I learn?

Learning and teaching are focused around language classes, complemented by lectures and seminars both on broad European issues of modern and contemporary importance, and on specific topics relevant to the target language(s). Subjects range widely from popular culture and current affairs to philosophy, politics, history, information technology, art and photography, film and theatre.

There will be ample opportunity for group work, as well as for individual research and self-directed study. Materials include texts from literary and journalistic sources, as well as input from audiovisual and internet media. Assessment methods include coursework, learning journals, essay writing, spoken presentations, oral and aural examining, written examinations, extended essays, projects, reports and dissertations.

For more information, visit Studying at Sussex.

What will I achieve?

  • advanced language and communication skills, as well as an introduction to skills in intercultural mediation such as translation and interpreting
  • intellectual skills including the ability to acquire appropriate knowledge, to analyse and evaluate cultural products of various kinds, to make comparisons between different areas of intellectual and cultural concern and the approaches that characterise them, and to express arguments and ideas effectively in both English and your target language(s)
  • knowledge and understanding of significant aspects of the culture, developments, artefacts and achievements of Europe and of countries in other continents where French, Italian or Spanish are spoken
  • informed and sympathetic comprehension and appreciation of the diversity, but also the inter-relatedness, of different cultures
  • through the crosscultural experience of a year spent studying or working abroad, skills and adaptability that give you excellent preparation for your future professional life.

Back to module list

Europe 1900-45

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1

This module focuses on the development of essential study skills such as textual analysis, note-taking, the planning and writing of essays and summaries. You will normally work with texts written in (one of) your foreign language(s).

Geographies of Development and Inequality

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1

The module examines the geography of development and the processes producing development and inequality from a global perspective. It looks at globalisation and the global integration of economies and societies, the geography of the creation and distribution of wealth and income and the processes that drive them at a global scale and in developed (Europe) and developing (East Asia and China) parts of the world. It examines the theories that geographers have developed to explain the changing map of development and considers the impact of public policies at a range of scales. It also aims to examine the linkages between places that compose a complex mosaic of development and inequality around the world.

Italian 1A

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1

You will consolidate and progress your knowledge of grammar. Improved grammatical accuracy, oral and written fluency, lexis, and listening and reading comprehension are achieved through the study of a variety of topics and integrated grammar. You will also gain insight into the culture and society of your chosen country.

Italian 1B

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1

You will acquire advanced knowledge of grammar and improve grammatical accuracy, oral and written fluency, lexis, and listening and reading comprehension through the study of a variety of topics and integrated grammar. There is an emphasis on the summarising and handling of authentic texts. You will also study the literature, culture, society and politics of Italy.

Italy 1900-45

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1

This module develops and extends the ideas and themes introduced in the lecture series History and Culture in the 20th Century. Relevant works of literature, film, theatre and the press are studied in Italian, wherever possible. Written and oral material is drawn from a wide range of sources to make you aware of the context in which the country whose language you study has progressed towards its current situation. You will develop essential skills of note-taking, discussing, summarising, analysing and essay writing (including documentation).

Place, Space and Landscape

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1

This module provides you with a grounding in the history, traditions and approaches that have shaped contemporary human geography. These include the fields of regional geography, radical geography and Marxism, urban and rural geography, economic geography, social and cultural geography, and political and historical geography. It concludes with a consideration of contemporary approaches to society and space.

Quantitative and Analytical Skills

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1

This module provides you with essential skills in quantitative and analytical methods, enabling you to evaluate different types of numerical data in human and physical geography. Topics include essential maths, trigonometry, descriptive statistics, inferential statistics, least squares regression, mechanics and modelling.

Each week a generic lecture introduces a particular topic and this is supported by practical-based workshops in which you gain experience in these skills. The workshops are based on exercises related to the substantive content of the modules of Geographies of Development and Inequality (for BA Geographers) and The Natural World 2 (for BSc Geographers). To provide intellectual coherence, you will be placed in workshop groups based upon your degree programme.

Study Skills in Geography and Ecology

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1

This module provides you with training in basic study skills for degree-level work. Topics include organisation, data resources, critical writing, referencing, critical thinking and reading, presentations, visual representation of data, GIS and maps, remote sensing.

Each week a generic lecture introduces a particular study skill and this is supported by practical-based workshops in which you gain experience in these skills. The workshops are based on exercises related to the substantive content of the modules of Place, Space and Landscape (for BA Geographers) and The Natural World 1 (for BSc Geographers). To provide intellectual coherence, you will be placed  in workshop groups based upon your degree programme. A residential fieldtrip also takes place, currently in the village of Alfriston, in the South Downs.

Geography Overseas Field Class

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2

In year 2 all students studying at Sussex go on a field class, either overseas or a non-residential one in Sussex. We offer an extensive ¿ and unrivalled ¿ set of international field class options for those who wish to choose them. In 2013, we will be taking trips to the US (Los Angeles), China and Vietnam. Students will carry out data collection for a period of about 10 days. Analysis and writing up of a learning diary will take place upon their return. The field class presents an opportunity for faculty to familiarise students with a location in which they themselves may conduct research and gives students the experience of carrying out their own research in that location.

Italian 2A

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2

Your knowledge of syntax will be revised and progressed and active knowledge of lexis increased. Speaking, listening, reading and written skills will be raised to a higher level through the study of authentic texts taken from a variety of media. The study of relevant current affairs will be an important element of the module.

Italian 2B

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2

Your knowledge of syntax and lexis will continue to be enhanced alongside the skills of speaking, listening, reading and writing. Practical aspects of living, studying and working abroad will be covered, including history, geography, politics, society, culture and literature.

Italy 1945-date

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2

Relevant works of literature, film, theatre and the press are studied in Italian, wherever possible. Written and oral material is drawn from a wide range of sources to make you aware of the context in which Italy has progressed towards its current situation. You will develop essential skills of note-taking, discussing, summarising, analysing and essay writing (including documentation). The module will allow you to progress towards independent study.

Methods and Approaches in Human Geography

15 credits
Autumn & spring teaching, Year 2

The module will equip you with the skills needed to carry out a final year thesis project in human geography. It will consist of lectures on quantitative and qualitative methods and on their application in particular branches of the discipline. It will also contain guidance on the preparation of the thesis proposal, arising in particular from presentations held in the spring term.

Cultural Geographies

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2

After introducing the cultural turn in human geography, the module focuses upon the development and impact of representational theories for the understanding of the cultural politics of landscape and nature and the challenge offered to this approach by recent non-representational thinking and theories of practice and performance. Cultural representations of class, sexuality, gender, race and landscape are covered, in each case examining the relationship between power and space at a variety of spatial and temporal scales. The module also incorporates an examination of twentieth and twenty-first century popular cultures and their geographies of resistance.

Culture, Race and Ethnicity

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2

This module explores the relationship between ideas of culture, race and ethnicity both historically and in contemporary society. You will examine a range of empirical examples that demonstrate how the concepts have been used – sometimes separately, sometimes in interlocking ways – in political projects or movements. There will be particular focus on contructions of 'whiteness'. Examples may include the use of race in 19th-century colonial administration, the politics of ethnicity in postwar London or the rise of the new right in contemporary Europe.

Environmental Perspectives on Development

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2

The module explores development with an explicit focus on environmental issues. You will look at the relationships between development and the environment: the consequences of development on the environment, environmental constraints to development, and problems of development in marginal environments. You will examine how the environment and issues around sustainability have been considered (or ignored) in relation to development and how this has changed over time. The module includes historical perspectives on environment and development, illustrating continuities and changes in policies related to environment and development. It also explores core issues around environmental management and development in relation to key resources, such as wildlife, forests and water.

Europe 1945-date

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2

The module provides you with an overview of important historical and cultural developments in the second part of the 20th century, focussing on the period from the 1940s through to the present day. Movements and trends in the political, historical and social area and their impact on the arts and literature are addressed in the lectures. For all these topics, various national settings (France, Germany, Italy and Spain) are examined and discussed. The lecture series seeks to establish a comparative perspective on the relevant issues.

Geographical Information Systems

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2

This module is designed to introduce you to the various components that constitute a Geographical Information System (GIS), while providing you with practical skills in using these tools. Using leading GIS software, you will gain direct experience of a range of data collection and input, database, analytical and visualisation techniques. These will include:

  • georeferencing
  • vector/raster integration
  • and data classification.

This methodology will be illustrated through a range of social and environmental applications, emphasising its decision-assisting potential and looking at some real world examples from the fields of disaster management and development.

Globalisation and Empire

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2

This module examines the key social, political, economic and cultural shifts that shaped the modern European empires, placing particular emphasis on Victorian Britain and its Empire during the 19th century. You will consider the British metropole and the colonial world within a single analytical framework, focusing on the trans­-imperial connections that laid the foundations of modern globalisation. You also explore the postcolonial traces of Empire in British, Australasian, Indian and North American contexts.

Language and Nation

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2

Following a short introduction, the module falls into two parts. The first looks at how we discover the links between Language, Thought and Nation, and try to identify and analyse covert as well as overt associations between these. Who are the guardians and gatekeepers of our 'native' languages, and what are the pressures to have English in England, French in France but Castillian in Spain and Post-Florentine in Italy? Are some languages more equal than others, conferring more status to their users? And why do languages still change despite 'Academies'? The second part looks at instances of how expressions of the relationship between a nation and its language emerge as various literary and other genres (with particular reference to the novel), and how these feed back into the collective identity (with particular reference to representations in the cinema of various countries).

Social Geography

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2

Following an introduction to the development of social geography, the module focuses around the interactions between social relations, space and place. These connections are explored through the geographies of class, ethnicity, sexuality and gender relations (and the intersections between them), at a variety of spatial scales, from local to global, and both urban and rural. We include geographies of activism, health and ability and gentrification.

Europe Mandatory Year Abroad - Modern Languages

120 credits
Autumn & spring teaching, Year 3

Geography Thesis

30 credits
Autumn & spring teaching, Year 4

During your final year, you are required to prepare a study to illustrate their ability to design and implement an empirical investigation in geography. The Geography Project entails the collection and analysis of primary data. You will have been given instruction in specific techniques of collecting and handling data and primary source material as well as advice on the presentational format required in the Level 2 module Research Skills, and will be given individual supervision in the design, conduct and writing up of your project throughout your final year.

Italian 3A

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

The two hours per week classroom contact throughout this 25-week module are devoted, on the one hand, to oral and interpreting work and, on the other, to translation and composition. There is therefore an emphasis upon oral proficiency, both in everyday conversation and in more formal contexts, such as presentations and mediation between speakers of Italian and English. There is a similar emphasis upon written proficiency, whether writing Italian 'freely' within the framework of a discursive essay, translating from English into Italian or, indeed, from Italian into English. Roughly equal contact time is devoted to these three written skills and the same weighting is accorded to each of them in assessments.

Italian 3B

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

Italian Special Subject

15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module, delivered in Italian to all single-honours and joint-major students studying Italian as part of their degree, will look at women's presence and representation in early modern Italian literature and art. This module will address some distinctive works by Boccaccio, Michelangelo and Vittoria Colonna, and will cover a variety of genres such as prose, poetry, philosophical commentary, letter writing and biography.

Advances in Climate Sciences

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module is an introduction to climate science with particular focus on climate feedbacks, climate observations, climate variability and climate analyses. The module will highlight the major challenges in climate sciences (e.g. global carbon cycles and aerosols), and significant climate phenomena, such as El Niño Southern Oscillation (ENSO). Practical sessions will enable you to gain hands-on experience in creating climate analysis and statistical plots using real-life data from climate observatories and outputs from existing climate models.

Climate Change Policy

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module provides you with a stimulating and critical introduction to contemporary national and international approaches to climate change policy. You will gain a sound knowledge of core principles from the discipline of environmental economics, which underpins the majority of existing climate change policy mechanisms, such as green taxes and tradable emissions permits. This understanding is then built upon to engage in a critical assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of contemporary climate policy approaches and the ethical issues they raise, including problems of inter-generational equity and the tensions between countries at differing stages of development. Throughout the module the theory and ideas covered are applied to real world examples of contemporary climate change policy problems, leaving you with an in depth understanding of contemporary climate policy debates and the tools required to critically engage with them.

Climate Change Policy

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module provides you with a stimulating and critical introduction to contemporary national and international approaches to climate change policy. You will gain a sound knowledge of core principles from the discipline of environmental economics, which underpins the majority of existing climate change policy mechanisms, such as green taxes and tradable emissions permits. This understanding is then built upon to engage in a critical assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of contemporary climate policy approaches and the ethical issues they raise, including problems of inter-generational equity and the tensions between countries at differing stages of development. Throughout the module the theory and ideas covered are applied to real world examples of contemporary climate change policy problems, leaving you with an in depth understanding of contemporary climate policy debates and the tools required to critically engage with them.

Cultures of Colonialism

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module introduces you to the colonial practices, discourses and cultures across the nineteenth century British Empire and their legacies. It examines the British metropole and its colonies within a single analytical framework, tracking the exchange of people, ideas and objects along the networks that connected them. Initially you will cover the main approaches to the study of British colonialism, including traditional imperial history and postcolonialism. The latter part of the module investigates cultural, social and political impacts of British colonialism at specific sites across the empire, including India, North America and New Zealand.

Cultures of Colonialism

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module introduces you to the colonial practices, discourses and cultures across the nineteenth century British Empire and their legacies. It examines the British metropole and its colonies within a single analytical framework, tracking the exchange of people, ideas and objects along the networks that connected them. Initially you will cover the main approaches to the study of British colonialism, including traditional imperial history and postcolonialism. The latter part of the module investigates cultural, social and political impacts of British colonialism at specific sites across the empire, including India, North America and New Zealand.

Environment, Ecology and Development

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module examines the impact of social and economic transformations, trade and technological development on people, environment and ecology in the tropics. The analysis includes a historical perspective, present-day impacts and future scenarios. Topics include problems of water and energy supply and their health and environmental consequences; indigenous environmental knowledge; intellectual property rights and biotechnology; local and national perspectives on wildlife, ecotourism and environmental protection.

Environment, Ecology and Development

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module examines the impact of social and economic transformations, trade and technological development on people, environment and ecology in the tropics. The analysis includes a historical perspective, present-day impacts and future scenarios. Topics include problems of water and energy supply and their health and environmental consequences; indigenous environmental knowledge; intellectual property rights and biotechnology; local and national perspectives on wildlife, ecotourism and environmental protection.

Genres in European Literature

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This weekly lecture plus fortnightly seminar module, delivered in English to all Single Honours linguists (one or two languages) will consider key genres or styles in 20th-century European prose literature. These will vary from year to year, but will typically include some of the following: the novel and narrative theory, the short story, women's writing, biography, autobiography, fantasy, juvenilia and writing about youth. Equally, the authors and works selected for study (in English translation) will vary, but will normally include at least one prominent writer in each of the four European languages offered at this level, namely French, German, Italian and Spanish.

Geographies of Rising and Declining Powers: China and Europe

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module examines the relative economic performance of the main world regions, focusing particularly on comparative economic performance and political dynamics in China and Europe. The module draws on geographic and political economic theories to explain geographies of wealth, poverty and power and explores the social, political and cultural foundations of economic life. You will study the main drivers of change, situating this within a wider context of globalisation, environmental and technological change and increasing economic and political interdependence.

Geographies of Rising and Declining Powers: China and Europe

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module examines the relative economic performance of the main world regions, focusing particularly on comparative economic performance and political dynamics in China and Europe. The module draws on geographic and political economic theories to explain geographies of wealth, poverty and power and explores the social, political and cultural foundations of economic life. You will study the main drivers of change, situating this within a wider context of globalisation, environmental and technological change and increasing economic and political interdependence.

Global Land Change

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module examines the development of land change studies and the theoretical and methodological challenges to linking biophysical, socio-economic, and remote sensing/GIS analysis. You will gain a good knowledge of both physical and socio-economic factors. The central themes of land change science include: detection and monitoring of land cover change processes; understanding the driving forces of land change; and finally measuring the environmental impacts and consequences of those changes. As such, you will analyse the various methods used in land change science with a particular focus on remote sensing. You will look at specific changes in land, such as desertification, agricultural expansion/intensification and urbanisation as well as looking into the impacts of land change on humans, climate change, biodiversity, and the hydrological cycle.

Globalisation and Geopolitics

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This interdisciplinary module explores the relevance of spatial relations in understanding world politics. It critically traces the history of the term geopolitics and its particular focus on the relationship between space and power. The module will examine key facets of contemporary globalisation, focusing on:

  • states and markets
  • energy and resources
  • violence
  • and ethnicity and nationalism, amongst other important topics.

This incorporates key theorists from political geography, international relations and political anthropology. Particular attention will be paid to the 'geopolitical imagination', the variety of ways in which states and regions are represented in political discourse, media, the arts and academia itself.

Labour Geographies and Work Migration

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This interdisciplinary module will appeal to you if you are interested in the impact of globalisation on employment relations and the related power inequalities. It focuses in particular on approaches to work migration which emphasise the agency of migrant workers in shifting the terms of employment, thus challenging the conventional wisdom on labour-capital relations. It incorporates social, cultural and political economic analysis and is concerned with labour geographies in both the global north and the global south, and their interconnectedness. The module will set changes in macro-level environments against grounded narratives of individual working lives and collective histories, including global and local perspectives.

Landscape, Nature and Representation

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module focuses upon the representation of landscapes and nature, and considers the ways in which representations are sites through which ideas, visions and imaginations are set to work. You will assess the production and impact of such representations, critically analysing a range of textual sources from a variety of origins which claim to represent landscape and natures. This will incorporate art, literature, music, the media and cartography.


 

Landscape, Nature and Representation

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module focuses upon the representation of landscapes and nature, and considers the ways in which representations are sites through which ideas, visions and imaginations are set to work. You will assess the production and impact of such representations, critically analysing a range of textual sources from a variety of origins which claim to represent landscape and natures. This will incorporate art, literature, music, the media and cartography.

Modern Languages Dissertation

15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module is available as an option both to single-honours and joint-major modern linguists. It provides the opportunity to conduct a self-assigned piece of research and to write it up in the target language, as an alternative to working in English in "Genres" (R9033). Each student will be allocated a supervisor in the relevant language, with whom s/he will agree the topic of her/his research and the title of the dissertation. However, that research will be essentially self-directed under the light-touch guidance of the supervisor, provided initially through shared workshops and, later on, through one-to-one tutorials. The student will be required to produce two excerpts of work in progress, at mutually agreed points in TB1, so that the supervisor can check that s/he is on the right lines and offer helpful formative feedback. For illustrative purposes, research topics might include: modern French authors, especially Sartre and the existentialists; post-war German literature; cinema adaptations of European literary works; Golden Age Spanish drama.

Population and Development

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module examines the relationship between population issues and economic, social and environmental aspects of development. It introduces theoretical frameworks for analysing population change and assesses the consequences of population growth for food supplies and the environment at both global and local levels. It goes on to examine factors affecting the components of population change including fertility and mortality decline, changing sex ratios, the growth of megacities and international migration. Policies on health, family planning and migration are also discussed.

Population and Development

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module examines the relationship between population issues and economic, social and environmental aspects of development. It introduces theoretical frameworks for analysing population change and assesses the consequences of population growth for food supplies and the environment at both global and local levels. It goes on to examine factors affecting the components of population change including fertility and mortality decline, changing sex ratios, the growth of megacities and international migration. Policies on health, family planning and migration are also discussed.

Rural Livelihoods in the Global South

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module considers the varied nature of rural livelihood systems in developing countries. You consider changes in livelihoods through livelihood diversification and migration, and the interconnectedness of the global and the local in causing change in rural societies. The module explores the impact of different agents of change on livelihoods. This will include the role of non-governmental organisations, the impact of modern biotechnology and the effects of trade on livelihoods, amongst other important examples. The module draws primarily (though by no means exclusively) on evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa and India.

Rural Livelihoods in the Global South

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module considers the varied nature of rural livelihood systems in developing countries. You consider changes in livelihoods through livelihood diversification and migration, and the interconnectedness of the global and the local in causing change in rural societies. The module explores the impact of different agents of change on livelihoods. This will include the role of non-governmental organisations, the impact of modern biotechnology and the effects of trade on livelihoods, amongst other important examples. The module draws primarily (though by no means exclusively) on evidence from Sub-Saharan Africa and India.

Transnationalism and Identity

30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 4

This module explores the complex and multiple effects of transnational migration on everyday geographies of home, identification and belonging. The focus will be on the diverse ways in which social and cultural identities are performed in a mobile context. Particular attention will be given to the spatialisation of such identities at a variety of scales (e.g. body, home, community) and the relations between them. Theoretical and empirical research drawn upon in the module will reflect the heterogeneity within and across diasporic groups in terms of class, gender, sexuality, race and ethnicity. You will learn that migrant identities are contingent on historical and geographical context and will situate discussions of the negotiation of belonging within debates on postcolonialism, multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism.

Transnationalism and Identity

30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 4

This module explores the complex and multiple effects of transnational migration on everyday geographies of home, identification and belonging. The focus will be on the diverse ways in which social and cultural identities are performed in a mobile context. Particular attention will be given to the spatialisation of such identities at a variety of scales (e.g. body, home, community) and the relations between them. Theoretical and empirical research drawn upon in the module will reflect the heterogeneity within and across diasporic groups in terms of class, gender, sexuality, race and ethnicity. You will learn that migrant identities are contingent on historical and geographical context and will situate discussions of the negotiation of belonging within debates on postcolonialism, multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism.

Back to module list

Entry requirements

Sussex welcomes applications from students of all ages who show evidence of the academic maturity and broad educational background that suggests readiness to study at degree level. For most students, this will mean formal public examinations; details of some of the most common qualifications we accept are shown below. If you are an overseas student, refer to Applicants from outside the UK.

All teaching at Sussex is in the English language. If your first language is not English, you will also need to demonstrate that you meet our English language requirements.

A level

Typical offer: AAB

Specific entry requirements: A levels must include Italian, grade B. Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade C.

International Baccalaureate

Typical offer: 35 points overall

Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need Higher Level Italian, with at least grade 5.

For more information refer to International Baccalaureate.

Access to HE Diploma

Typical offer: Pass the Access to HE Diploma with at least 45 credits at Level 3, of which 30 credits must be at Distinction and 15 credits at Merit or higher.

Specific entry requirements: The Access to HE Diploma would ideally contain substantial amounts of Level 3 credit in Geography. Successful applicants will normally also need A level Italian, at least grade B (or other evidence of A level standard Italian) and GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade C.

For more information refer to Access to HE Diploma.

Advanced Diploma

Typical offer: Pass with grade A in the Diploma and A in the Additional and Specialist Learning.

Specific entry requirements: The Additional and Specialist Learning must be an A-level in Italian, grade B. Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade C.

For more information refer to Advanced Diploma.

BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma

Typical offer: DDD

Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will also need A level Italian, grade B, in addition to the BTEC Extended Diploma; plus GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade C.

For more information refer to BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma.

European Baccalaureate

Typical offer: Overall result of 80%

Specific entry requirements: Evidence of existing academic ability in Italian is essential, with a final grades of 8.0.

For more information refer to European Baccalaureate.

Finnish Ylioppilastutkinto

Typical offer: Overall average result in the final matriculation examinations of at least 6.5

Specific entry requirements: Evidence of existing academic ability in Italian is essential.

French Baccalauréat

Typical offer: Overall final result of at least 13.5/20

Specific entry requirements: Evidence of existing academic ability in Italian is essential. Successful applicants will normally need a final mark of 12/20 in both Italian and History-Geography.

German Abitur

Typical offer: Overall result of 1.5 or better

Specific entry requirements: Evidence of existing academic ability in Italian is essential (normally with 12/15 in each).

Irish Leaving Certificate (Higher level)

Typical offer: AAAABB

Specific entry requirements: Evidence of existing academic ability in Italian is essential (normally with a Higher level result of at least grade B).

Italian Diploma di Maturità or Diploma Pass di Esame di Stato

Typical offer: Final Diploma mark of at least 92/100

Scottish Highers and Advanced Highers

Typical offer: AAABB

Specific entry requirements: Highers must include Italian, with at least grade B. Ideally, applicants will also have Italian at Advanced Higher, also grade B. Successful applications will also need Mathematics at Standard Grade, grade 1 or 2.

For more information refer to Scottish Highers and Advanced Highers.

Spanish Titulo de Bachillerato (LOGSE)

Typical offer: Overall average result of at least 8.5

Specific entry requirements: Evidence of existing academic ability in Italian is essential.

Welsh Baccalaureate Advanced Diploma

Typical offer: Pass the Core plus AA in two A-levels

Specific entry requirements: A levels must include Italian. Successful applicants will also need GCSE (or equivalent) Mathematics, with at least grade C.

For more information refer to Welsh Baccalaureate.

English language requirements

IELTS 6.5 overall, with not less than 6.0 in each section. Internet-based TOEFL with 88 overall, with at least 20 in Listening, 19 in Reading, 21 in Speaking and 23 in Writing.

For more information, refer to alternative English language requirements.

For more information about the admissions process at Sussex:

Undergraduate Admissions,
Sussex House,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 678416
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E ug.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

Fees and funding

Fees

Home/EU students: £9,0001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £9,0002
Overseas students: £16,2003

1 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.

Care Leavers Award (2014)

Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 31 July 2015

For students have been in council care before starting at Sussex.

First-Generation Scholars Scheme (2014)

Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 12 June 2015

The scheme is targeted to help students from relatively low income families – ie those whose family income is up to £42,622.

First-Generation Scholars Scheme EU Student Award (2014)

Region: Europe (Non UK)
Level: UG
Application deadline: 12 June 2015

£3,000 fee waiver for UG Non-UK EU students whose family income is below £25,000

Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust for Undergraduate Study (2014)

Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 1 March 2014

The Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust are offering bursaries to Undergraduate students following an undergraduate degree courses in any subject.

 

Careers and profiles

With their broad range of numeric, literary, practical and resource management skills, Sussex geographers are well-equipped to enter a wide range of careers in the private and public sectors. 

Recent graduates have taken up a wide range of posts including: associate head hunter at Major Players • environmental advisor at Groundwork UK • events and marketing intern at Right To Play • geography teacher at Ridgeway Secondary School • junior account executive at BGB Communications • trainee producer at Icon Films • project manager at British Waterways • conservation worker at British Trust • policy advisor at DEFRA • business administrator at Rio Tinto • events manager at Come Play • field technical assistant at Riedel Resources Limited • assistant wind-farm project developer at Gaoh Energy Ltd • risk analyst at Renaissance Insurance Group • trainee ranger at East Sussex Council Council • trainee reserves officer at Leicestershire and Rutland Wildlife Trust. 

Specific employer destinations listed are taken from recent Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education surveys, which are produced annually by the Higher Education Statistics Agency

Employers will value your communication and language skills, not to mention the maturity and life experience gained during your year abroad. More than 80 per cent of employers surveyed said they actively sought graduates who had studied abroad (QS Global Employer Survey Report 2011).

Careers that are open to our graduates include: arts and the media • journalism and publishing • business and marketing • commerce and finance • civil and diplomatic services • the institutions of the European Union • public service and politics • teaching and academia.

Recent destinations of our graduates include: Amnesty International • Red Cross • Sony • Headstar • DeHavilland News • Imperial College, London • Keble College, Oxford.

Careers and employability

For employers, it’s not so much what you know, but what you can do with your knowledge that counts. The experience and skills you’ll acquire during and beyond your studies will make you an attractive prospect. Initiatives such as SussexPlus, delivered by the Careers and Employability Centre, help you turn your skills to your career advantage. It’s good to know that 94 per cent of our graduates are in work or further study (Which? University).

For more information on the full range of initiatives that make up our career and employability plan for students, visit Careers and alumni.

Samantha's career perspective

Samantha Cameron MBE

‘Being particularly interested in development and conservation issues, and how the two can be compatible, the Geography degree programme at Sussex seemed to fit my needs perfectly.

‘It was through the University that I first came to Madagascar – after finding out about VSO’s Overseas Training Programme – and I spent a year working with the NGO Feedback Madagascar (www.feedbackmadagascar.org) between the second and third year of my degree. This was a life-changing experience, bringing a whole new dimension to my studies and giving me the Madagascar “bug”; I have been out here ever since.

‘In 2005 I was awarded an MBE for “services to healthcare and community development in Madagascar”. We are continuing to build on our rural development and conservation programmes, and work is forever challenging and fulfilling – both in the field and in the office.’

Samantha Cameron MBE
Programme coordinator,
Feedback Madagascar

Contact our School

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.

How do I find out more?

For more information, contact the admissions tutor:
Department of Geography, 
University of Sussex, Falmer, 
Brighton BN1 9SJ, UK
E ug.admissions@geography.sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 877238
Department of Geography

Sussex Centre for Language Studies

The Sussex Centre for Language Studies has a digital language laboratory and multimedia workstations for private study of over sixty world languages, and its highly qualified and experienced staff will make your learning experience relaxed but structured.

How do I find out more?

For more information, contact the admissions tutor:
Sussex Centre for Language Studies,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SH, UK
E languages@sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 877258
F +44 (0)1273 678476
Sussex Centre for Language Studies

Visit us

Sussex Open Day
Saturday 5 October 2013

Open Days offer you the chance to speak one to one with our world-leading academic staff, find out more about our courses, tour specialist facilities, explore campus, visit student accommodation, and much more. Booking is required. Go to Visit us and Open Days to book onto one of our tours.

Campus tours

Not able to attend one of our Open Days? Then book on to one of our weekly guided campus tours.

Mature-student information session

If you are 21 or over, and thinking about starting an undergraduate degree at Sussex, you may want to attend one of our mature student information sessions. Running between October and December, they include guidance on how to approach your application, finance and welfare advice, plus a guided campus tour with one of our current mature students.

Self-guided visits

If you are unable to make any of the visit opportunities listed, drop in Monday to Friday year round and collect a self-guided tour pack from Sussex House reception.

Jonathan's staff perspective

Jonathan Bridges

‘Sussex provides world-leading teaching and excellent academic facilities, with a vibrant student life in a fantastic location. All of this meant that I left Sussex with a unique set of experiences and a degree that has prepared me for my future.

‘Joining Student Recruitment Services at the University has enabled me to share my experiences of Sussex with others. Coming to an Open Day gives you the opportunity to meet our research-active academics and our current students, while exploring our beautiful campus. But don’t worry if you can’t make an Open Day, there’s plenty of other opportunities to visit Sussex. Check out our Visit us and Open Days pages or our Facebook page to find out more.

‘I’ve loved every moment of my time at Sussex – these have been the best years of my life.’

Jonathan Bridges
Graduate Intern, Student Recruitment Services

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