Environmental humanities
Aiding restorative & regenerative futures
Your education in environmental humanities at UNSW will provide you with a solid foundation to engage with contemporary social and environmental issues, and become the environment and society custodians the world needs today.Â
Environmental Humanities at UNSW is made up of a collective of individuals practising and supporting engaged ecocultural research and teaching. We're committed to critically and creatively aiding in efforts to bring about restorative and regenerative futures.
Your study will examine current environmental and societal complexities and how solutions are interwoven and entangled with questions of culture, knowledge, meaning, values, ethics and politics.
Rethinking our approach to social science & humanitiesÂ
At UNSW, we adopt transdisciplinary and innovative modes of research and teaching. Our work interlinks with geography, critical social theory, cultural studies, environmental communication, history, philosophy, science and technology studies (STS), anthropology, legal geography and urban studies.
Our research and teaching are informed by the proposition that approaches to social science and humanities must be rethought and engage with new and extraordinarily old ways of knowing and being.
We use environmental and social justice framing across our research and teaching, and our work is often collaborative and action-based, actively working with communities locally and globally.
Throughout your study, you’ll examine and understand the interplay of sociocultural factors that influence today’s environmental and societal complexities. Our educators are passionate about engaging students in critically and creatively questioning contemporary human ecological relations.
Our researchÂ
As environmental humanities scholars, we critically engage with the urgent issues of these times, which we understand as contextualised in long histories of human social and ecological interactions. Our research has the main intention of recognising and creating safe and thriving spaces – environmentally, culturally and socially – for all beings.
Find out more about our research in environment and society.
Quick links
Study
-
Develop a deep interdisciplinary understanding to consciously and actively engage with contemporary eco-cultural issues. Â
- Bachelor of ArtsÂ
- Bachelor of Social Sciences
- Bachelor of Arts/Law
- Bachelor of Social Sciences/Law
- Bachelor of Arts/Education (Secondary)Ìý(²Ñ¾±²Ô´Ç°ù)
- Bachelor of Advanced Science (Honours)/Arts
- Bachelor of Advanced Science (Honours)/Social Sciences
- Bachelor of Commerce/ArtsÂ
- Bachelor of Computer Science/Arts
- Bachelor of Economics/Arts
- Bachelor of Engineering (Honours)/Arts
- Bachelor of Environmental Management/Arts
- Bachelor of Fine Arts (Minor)
- Bachelor of Fine Arts/Arts
- Bachelor of Media / Arts
- Bachelor of Media/ Social Sciences
- Bachelor of Medical Studies/Doctor of Medicine/Arts
- Bachelor of Science/Arts
- Bachelor of Science/Social Sciences
- Bachelor of Science (Advanced Mathematics)(Honours)/Arts
- Bachelor of Social Work (Honours)/Arts
- Bachelor of Social Work/Social Sciences
- Bachelor of Media (Minor)
- Bachelor of Design (Minor)
- Bachelor of Science (Minor)
- Bachelor of Advanced Science (Honours) (Minor)
- Bachelor of Economics (Minor)
-
Honours is available to high-achieving environmental humanities students. You’ll develop research and professional skills guided by staff who are passionate about research and the development of emerging researchers.
-
Prepare to think in transformative ways. Become a reflexive leader, change agent, and advocate at a local and global scale. Use rigorous, critical, and creative thinking to engage with environmental challenges' sociocultural and political-economic causes and responses.Â
Immerse yourself in a transdisciplinary program of social sciences, humanities, creative arts, physical sciences, community participation, and place-based approaches. Our postgraduate environmental management programs are flexible and suitable for specialists and newcomers.Â
You will: Develop practical tools for ethical and restorative sustainability leadership in professional contexts, experience diverse knowledge systems and empower yourself to communicate complex ideas, and learn to nurture personal and societal capacities to rethink and reshape the world in reparative and regenerative ways.
Build your expertise and courage for ecological and societal change in the following programs:
-
Our postgraduate research students conduct original research through a Masters by Research or a Doctor of Philosophy in a range of research areas within the environment and society subject area.
You’ll investigate and research areas such as critical geographies, ecocultural studies and communication, environmental justice, the environment, technology and politics of knowledge, and environmental history. Â
Postgraduate research provides students with the opportunity to contribute new and meaningful knowledge to an area of environment and society they are passionate about. Undertaking a research degree at UNSW allows you to work within a faculty ranked above world standards in research excellence.
For an example of a recently completed Environment & Society PhD, see Dr. Gretchen Miller’s The Rescue Project.
Environment & Society's acknowledgement
We acknowledge the Gadigal and Bedigal people of the Eora nation, the Traditional Custodians of this Land within which we work, as well as the First Nations custodians of all lands and waters. It is our goal to teach and do research seeking out restorative relations between peoples and Country as a way of paying our respect to Elders – past, present, and emerging – and to extend that respect to all beings.