Skip to Main Content

Contents

Subject Overview

Geography is exciting and relevant. You’ll enjoy Geography if you’re interested in the worlds around you and want to make a positive difference. Geography addresses a wide range of contemporary challenges such as: climate change and sea-level rise, dirty rivers, uneven economic development, sustainable communities, migration, housing and health policy, urban pollution, indigenous rights, and environmental management.

Geographers study places, human and physical interactions and the processes that shape those interactions. They explore why nations, regions, cities and communities develop differently in different settings, how landscapes are formed, how social, economic and natural landscapes are related, and how to make better worlds by responding effectively to human-environment problems.

The University of Auckland Geography programme is the highest-ranking in New Zealand, and 30th in the world. As geographers we study what’s special about places, and our programme highlights Auckland and Aotearoa/New Zealand: its distinctive topography and coastline, fascinating cultural and economic history, exciting social diversity, and innovative responses to environmental challenges. We include Māori and indigenous knowledges across our teaching curriculum and research programmes. We also acknowledge Auckland’s Pacific character and connections to island nations as well as links with Southeast Asia and beyond. You can study Geography as an undergraduate major or postgraduate specialisation in either the Faculty of Science or Faculty of Arts programmes.

Knowledge and Skills

We welcome PhD proposals in areas including:

  • Emerging Economic Spaces
  • Land, Place and Culture
  • Population, Mobilities and Wellbeing
  • Development and New Regional Geographies
  • Contemporary Issues in Human Geography
  • Urban Worlds
  • Geographies of Housing and Urban Change
  • People, Participation and Development
  • Climate Change: Past, Present, and Future
  • Policy and Expertise
  • Future Food and Biological Economies
  • Research Topics in Geography
  • Applied Fluvial Geomorphology
  • Applied Coastal Geomorphology
  • Current Issues in Coastal Management
  • Climate and Society
  • GIS and Spatial Data Handling
  • Spatial Analysis and Geocomputation
  • Advanced Raster Data Analysis
  • Visualisation and Cartography
  • Advanced Spatial Data Handling
  • Programming, GIS Customisation and Web-mapping

Potential Careers

Geographers are sought after as effective critical thinkers and problem solvers. In our courses you’ll study real world issues. You’ll also develop the diverse practical skills, ethical insights and analytical capabilities required to address them and lead debates in all parts of society. Our graduates build successful careers across a range of roles in research and development, government, policy, industry, and education.

Schedule

Plan Schedules