Philosophy and Global Sustainable Development (BASc) (Full-Time, 2021 Entry)
This course is closed
for Clearing 2024
This course is closed for Clearing 2022
If you would like to study at Warwick, there are other courses available for 2025 entry.
UCAS Code
V5L8
Qualification
Bachelor of Arts and Sciences (BASc)
Duration
3 years full-time or 4 years full-time with intercalated year spent either studying abroad or on work placement
Start Date
27 September 2021
Department of Study
Department of Global Sustainable Development
Location of Study
University of Warwick
Our Philosophy and Global Sustainable Development (BASc) degree allows you to apply your passion for Philosophy to answering the Big Questions of our time by studying it in combination with Global Sustainable Development (GSD).
Course overview
GSD encompasses a network of complex challenges that require innovative thought and practical answers. By studying Philosophy and GSD, you’ll encounter how thinkers of the past developed new modes of thought in response to the problems of their time. Today, global inequality, food security, and potentially irreversible changes in our environment demand new ways of thinking. Within the Philosophy Department, you’ll learn about key ethical theories and critical concepts such as biopower and existentialism, and develop vital reasoning and communication skills. Meanwhile, with GSD, you’ll take a transdisciplinary approach as you confront the Big Questions facing our world today and consider the practical solutions that may shape the future.
Our students are aspiring global citizens with social consciences. They’re flexible, adaptable and broad-minded. You’ll need to be ready to think creatively and embrace new opinions from your peers from across the world. We’ll challenge you to become an active participant in your own learning and you’ll build your skillset by completing professional skills certificates as part of the course. You’ll also have the opportunity to spend part of your second year studying abroad at our partner institution, Monash University, home to the world-leading Monash Sustainable Development Institute. Alternatively, you may choose to apply for an intercalated year spent either studying abroad or on a work placement (subject to you meeting departmental academic requirements).
Students are automatically enrolled on the three-year course, however you have the option to change to a four-year course with an intercalated year in the third year.
Course structure
Your course will consist of a 50:50 split, with half of the teaching provided by the GSD Department, and the other half by the Philosophy Department.
Year One
GSD modules
You’ll undertake three core modules designed to provide you with a critical understanding of the ‘three pillars of sustainable development’ (45 CATS in total):
- Economic Principles of Global Sustainable Development (15 CATS)
- Environmental Principles of Global Sustainable Development (15 CATS)
- Social Principles of Global Sustainable Development (15 CATS)
You’ll also take the core Global Sustainable Development Project module (15 CATS), giving you the chance to see how the principles of GSD apply to a real case affecting a local community.
Philosophy modules
You’ll take one 30 CATS core module offered by the Philosophy Department, Introduction to Philosophy without Logic. The remaining 30 CATS are chosen from a selection of first year modules offered by the Philosophy Department.
Certificates
We offer a range of unique certificates outside of the curriculum as a way of continuing your professional development. You can find out more about the certificates here.
In your first year optional certificates in Digital Literacy, Sustainability and Professional Communication with Work Placement will be available.
Year Two
GSD modules
As you begin to apply the perspectives you were introduced to in Year One, you'll have the opportunity to engage with a key issue in sustainability, studying one optional core module from the following (30 CATS in total):
- Health and Sustainable Development (30 CATS)
- Security, Sovereignty and Sustainability in the Global Food System (30 CATS)
- Inequalities and Sustainable Development: Inclusion and Dignity for All (30 CATS)
You’ll also choose optional modules with a GSD focus totalling 30 CATS either from within GSD or from other departments across the University.
Philosophy modules
You'll take 60 CATS of second year optional modules offered by the Philosophy Department.
Certificates
There is an opportunity to take the Certificate of Coaching Practice and the Certificate of Professional Communication with Work Placement.
Year Two (with Terms Two and Three abroad)
Term One
If you opt to travel abroad in your second year to study at Monash University, in the first term at Warwick you'll take one of three optional core GSD modules (15 CATS in total):
- Health and Sustainable Development (15 CATS)
- Security, Sovereignty and Sustainability in the Global Food System (15 CATS)
- Inequalities and Sustainable Development: Inclusion and Dignity for All (15 CATS)
You’ll also study further relevant second year modules with a GSD focus from within or outside of the School for Cross-faculty Studies, totalling 15 CATS.
In addition, you'll also take 30 CATS worth of second year optional modules in Philosophy.
Terms Two and Three
Whilst abroad, you are required to study relevant approved modules equating to 60 CATS selected from those offered by the partner institution. These modules will be pre-approved by the Warwick departments, and will be subject to the approval of your GSD-based personal tutor.
Year Three
Intercalated Year (study abroad or work placement)
You could opt to spend a year studying abroad at one of Warwick's partner institutions, or completing a work placement. This year will not contribute towards the overall grade of your degree, however, it will be recorded on your Higher Education Achievement Report (HEAR).
Final Year
GSD modules
There is one core module: a dissertation (30 CATS). You’ll also take further relevant modules with a GSD focus from within or outside of the School for Cross-faculty Studies, totalling 30 CATS.
Philosophy modules
You'll take final year options in Philosophy worth 60 CATS.
How will I learn?
You'll attend lectures and take part in seminars, workshops and tutorials and work with other students in teams on controversial, topical problems that pose significant sustainable development questions. You'll undertake fieldwork, archival research, interviews with members of the local area and engage in peer discussion to propose alternative solutions. You'll review the work of other students too.
You'll be taught by a range of academics from different disciplines who will communicate their expertise on a specific issue and describe their methodology for addressing it. Your role is to bring together these various approaches and to develop your own informed stance on each issue.
Contact hours
Modules
Core first year GSD modules have between 20 and 25 hours of contact time. Each module is made up of lectures, workshops and, for the Global Sustainable Development Project module, group supervision sessions.
In the second year, optional core GSD modules have between 45 and 50 contact hours each for the 30 CATS versions and half this for the shorter 15 CATS versions.
In the final year, the core GSD dissertation module involves eight lectures and eight supervision sessions across three terms.
Optional GSD modules are available with between 25 and 50 hours for scheduled contact time, depending upon how the module is taught. For example, some modules have lectures, seminars, film screenings and research supervision, whereas others have lectures and workshops. Some modules may include field trips.
Module offerings in other departments may involve more or less formal teaching time per week, depending on your module choices.
Certificates
- The Certificate of Digital Literacy involves attendance at a weekly hour-long workshop for ten weeks of the first term.
- The Certificate of Sustainability involves attendance at two workshops in the third term.
- The Certificate of Professional Communication involves 20 workshop hours over a one week period in the third term. This certificate also involves a work placement completed over four weeks in the summer (the work placement can be longer).
- The Certificate of Coaching Practice involves ten workshop hours over five weeks of the second term.
Class size
Seminar groups in GSD comprise around 20 students.
How will I be assessed?
We continually review our assessment methods in light of feedback. Therefore assessment criteria are subject to change annually.
Modules in the GSD Department
In the first year, two of the core GSD modules have an exam worth 40%. The remaining 60% of these modules and the other core GSD modules are assessed by methods other than formal examination, including essays, online quizzes, presentations, and a group research project.
In the second year, optional core GSD modules and optional modules in GSD do not have traditional examinations. Depending on your module choices, you may be assessed on case studies, research papers, essays, log books, projects, presentations, quizzes and critical policy reviews.
The final year core GSD module is a Dissertation/Long Project and so is assessed via coursework, including a research proposal and presentation or other means of dissemination.
You can find out about assessment methods for individual GSD modules on our module web pages.
Modules in the Philosophy Department
Philosophy modules are assessed either by a combination of assessed work (essays and traditional examination), wholly by assessed essays, or wholly by traditional examination.
In the first year, the core Philosophy module is currently 80% assessed by examination. You then have a choice of optional Philosophy modules which have different assessment patterns, so the assessment methods will vary according to which modules you select. This is also the case for the second and final year modules, as you have a choice of optional Philosophy modules available to you.
Modules from across the University
The methods of assessment will vary according to the optional modules that you choose from across the University.
The overall percentage of the course that is assessed by coursework depends upon the options taken.
Weightings
The final degree classification is determined by your second and final year marks and each contributes 50%.
Study abroad
Integrated study abroad: There is an option to spend the second and third terms of second year abroad studying at Monash University. Students may be based in Melbourne, Australia or Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.
Students spend the first term of their second year studying at Warwick and will travel to Monash University in February for the start of its second semester (which spans Warwick’s second and third terms).
During their time abroad students study approved modules/units and will undertake assessments. The credit gained from this study is used to contribute towards the final degree classification awarded by Warwick.
Intercalated study abroad: organised with the International Office, this is an opportunity to study for a year long unaccredited period at one of Warwick’s partner universities. This takes place between second and third year, with students studying a full course load but without any formal contribution towards their overall degree grade. This will however be recorded on your Higher Education Achievement Report (HEAR).
Work experience
As part of their degree programme, students have the option to take part in both short and long work placements which are formally recognised on the Higher Education Achievement Report. The work placements enable students to engage in the world of work and learn about the professional environment. Additionally, it is an opportunity for students to apply theory to practice, develop skills, learn from industry professionals as well as explore a future career path. This ultimately supports students in developing their employability skills and prepares them for future employment.
The two work placement options are:
Intercalated year-long work placement: You have the opportunity to complete a four year degree, in which the work placement takes place after you have completed your second year.
Certificate of Professional Communication: You can take this optional certificate in your first or second year. As part of this certificate, you’ll undertake a short four week work placement which takes place during the summer.
Entry Requirements
General entry requirements
A level:
- AAA
- You will also need grade B/grade 6 in English and Mathematics at GCSE
- We make differential offers to students in a number of circumstances at AAB, plus grade B/grade 6 in English and Mathematics at GCSE
IB:
- 38 to include Mathematics and English
BTEC:
- We welcome applications from students taking BTECs alongside one or two A levels
- You will also need grade B/grade 6 in English and Mathematics at GCSE
Additional requirements
Second personal statement: If you meet (or are predicted to meet) the minimum entry requirements, we will invite you to submit a second personal statement to Warwick, addressing your reasons for applying to the course. We will contact applicants directly to request the second personal statement and provide guidance at that time.
English Language: You will also need to meet our English Language requirements. This course falls under Band C.
International Students
We welcome applications from students with other internationally recognised qualifications.
Find out more about international entry requirements.
Contextual data and differential offers
Warwick may make differential offers to students in a number of circumstances. These include students participating in the Realising Opportunities programme, or who meet two of the contextual data criteria. Differential offers will be one or two grades below Warwick’s standard offer (to a minimum of BBB).
Warwick International Foundation Programme (IFP)
All students who successfully complete the Warwick IFP and apply to Warwick through UCAS will receive a guaranteed conditional offer for a related undergraduate programme (selected courses only).
Find out more about standard offers and conditions for the IFP.
Taking a gap year
Applications for deferred entry welcomed.
Interviews
We do not typically interview applicants. Offers are made based on your UCAS form which includes predicted and actual grades, your personal statement and school reference. We will also consider your second personal statement when making offers.
Year One
Economic Principles of Global Sustainable Development
Why and how do economists address issues of global sustainable development? In this module, you’ll learn about the relationship between economic activity, social justice and environmental sustainability, the economic theories that underpin sustainable development policy interventions and how those theories impact upon policy design. After studying this module, you’ll be able to apply fundamental economic principles to the analysis of global sustainable development problems. You’ll also understand how economic policies intended to address those problems are developed and be able to offer informed critiques of such policies.
Social Principles of Global Sustainable Development
This introductory module examines in depth the concepts that allow you to analyse and interpret the social and political issues related to global sustainable development. You’ll learn to understand and evaluate the most pressing social and political dimensions of sustainability at national and international levels.
Upon completing this module, you’ll have acquired the knowledge and understanding to be able to offer a well-informed evidence-based explanation of the social and political dimensions of key challenges such as: inequality, environmental harm, health, and food. You’ll also be able to explain the threats to social cohesion caused by forms of economic development, reflect critically on the reasons why some countries are considered developed while others have stayed poor, and understand and write critically about the continuing challenges of attempting to provide “Education for all” and “Health for all”.
Environmental Principles of GSD
This module is structured around an emerging global consensus that humans are compromising the global biosphere by transgressing nine Planetary Boundaries: the result of which will be fundamental and unrecoverable change that significantly compromises the safe operating space for human development. We focus on the natural science of these environmental issues – covering well known topics like climate change and biodiversity loss, as well as less prominent problems, such as biochemical flows. We evaluate existing governance and management efforts, and develop innovative responses of our own. You’ll be taught how to write a policy briefing and will prepare one on your chosen subject aimed at a specific decision-making audience. Then, you’ll convert your brief to a policy pitch: a two minute ‘sell’ of your proposals. By the end of this module, you’ll possess key knowledge of environmental principles and also skills valuable for creating meaningful change in the world of work, governance and/or activism.
GSD Project
This is an innovative and practical module designed to give you crucial research and analysis skills linked to the important issue of sustainable transport. The module is taught by a number of experts in the field and working on your own and as part of a team, you’ll be required to carry out research that will advance your understanding of the application of theories you’ll have studied in your other first-year modules.
Introduction to Philosophy (without logic)
You'll have a wide-ranging introduction to philosophy, including ancient, continental, moral and political philosophy, followed by epistemology, metaphysics, philosophy of mind and aesthetics, and logic. You'll learn to engage critically with different viewpoints and critically analyse and evaluate arguments central to philosophy.
Year Two
Health and Sustainable Development
Viable and equitable solutions in health and sustainable development require interdisciplinary and critical thinking. The first part of the module will introduce you to fundamental concepts of global health governance and health systems, and acquaint you with key global health priorities like drug resistance and mental health from the perspective of GSD. The second part of the module will focus on issues that relate to policies and behavioural change, and are also applicable beyond health, for example in areas like education or technology transfer. Alongside the module content, you’ll have the opportunity to develop your analytical skills to make independent, critical, and constructive contributions to Health and Sustainable Development.
OR
Security, Sovereignty and Sustainability in the Global Food System
The UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), agreed in 2015, commit the international community to a set of 17 goals to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure prosperity. Of these, Goal 2 specifically aims to end hunger, end all forms of malnutrition, and ensure sustainable food production systems by 2030.
The pressing need for such initiatives is stark: we inhabit a world where at least 800 million people are chronically undernourished. The world population is projected to increase to a staggering 10 billion people by 2050, yet who will be responsible for ensuring all these mouths are fed? And can we ever produce and consume food for so many people without causing an unsustainable impact on our environment?
Food security, sustainability and sovereignty are thus crucial issues confronting the world today, and it is these issues which this module seeks to introduce and evaluate. The module is taught in collaboration with active researchers from across various disciplines at Warwick, especially those involved in the University’s Global Research Priority on Food.
OR
Inequalities and Sustainable Development: Inclusion and Dignity for All
This module focuses on how inequalities shape our societies, economies, environments and politics. Starting with the question ‘does inequality matter?’, you'll critically reflect on the UN's decision to integrate inequalities into the Sustainable Development Agenda. You’ll then explore six different dimensions of inequalities (work, politics, environmental justice, societal discrimination, automation and globalisation, opportunities and empowerment) and gain an understanding of the complexities of these problems. Finally, you’ll appreciate the challenges faced by today’s policy makers who aim to address issues of inequalities while taking into consideration all three pillars of sustainable development.
Year Three
GSD Dissertation/Long Project
In this final-year module you’ll bring together all of your learning and experiences on the course – the theoretical concepts and principles and your practical know-how – in order to address a specific sustainable development problem of your own choosing. This will be a problem that concerns you most and which you’d like to tackle.
You’ll be supported by an academic supervisor to devise a suitable project and to undertake research to explore the issue, taking a transdisciplinary approach to your investigation in order to produce an original research output. This may be a concept paper, a practical project, a film production, a long essay, an advocacy campaign etc. – use your creativity!
You’ll design a strategy for disseminating your findings (for example at a conference presentation, via online publication or an article in a journal or at a public meeting that you’ve arranged). This provides you with an opportunity to get your voice heard in a forum where it matters and could have lasting impact.
In the second and final years of the course, you may choose from a range of Philosophy modules to study the aspects of Philosophy that interest you most.
Examples of optional modules/options for current students:
GSD Department
- Managing Natural Resources
- The Energy Trilemma
- Human Rights and Social Justice in Latin America and the Caribbean
Please see here for a full list of optional modules offered by the GSD Department.
Philosophy Department
Tuition fees
Find out more about fees and funding.
Additional course costs
There may be costs associated with other items or services such as academic texts, course notes, and trips associated with your course. Students who choose to complete a work placement or study abroad will pay reduced tuition fees for their third year.
Warwick Undergraduate Global Excellence Scholarship 2021
We believe there should be no barrier to talent. That's why we are committed to offering a scholarship that makes it easier for gifted, ambitious international learners to pursue their academic interests at one of the UK's most prestigious universities. This new scheme will offer international fee-paying students 250 tuition fee discounts ranging from full fees to awards of £13,000 to £2,000 for the full duration of your Undergraduate degree course.
Find out more about the Warwick Undergraduate Global Excellence Scholarship 2021
Your career
As a GSD graduate, you have a wide range of career pathways that are available to you. This is demonstrated by the variety of work placements that our students have completed with employers from different sectors.
Our students have been successful in securing work placements with employers from the private, public, and third sectors. These include:
- Research institutions
- Governmental bodies
- Non-governmental organisations
- Intelligence agencies
- Housing
- Environmental consultancies
Our students have undertaken diverse roles such as:
- Marketing Assistant
- Sustainability Officer
- Intelligence Analyst
- Researchers
You’ll learn valuable transferable skills that will help you with your employment prospects including:
- Analysing and problem solving: Through your study of economic principles and models, you’ll learn how to extract the essential features of complex systems, providing useable frameworks for evaluation
- Critical thinking: You’ll assess arguments, make judgements, formulate reasoned debates and generate feasible solutions
- Communication: You’ll develop advanced communication skills that enable you to communicate with a variety of audiences and in different settings
- Research: You’ll undertake an integrated programme of research skills training, teaching you how to source, evaluate and use different forms of information and data
- Organisation: Through a rigorous assessment schedule and a compulsory dissertation module in your final year, you’ll learn the essentials of time management, prioritisation and how to be well organised
- Collaboration: You’ll have plenty of opportunities to work with others and nurture your emotional intelligence, developing a professional attitude
Helping you find the right career
We have a dedicated Employability and Placement Manager who’ll provide you with one-to-one careers guidance. They work in collaboration with employers, so you’ll be supported in securing appropriate work placements. You’ll have access to specialist pre-placement advice, guidance and preparation, as well as on-going support during your placement.
You’ll also have access to the University’s Student Opportunity resources (including careers counselling, employment advice, and job fairs).
Find out more about careers support at Warwick.
"Intertwine philosophy with your everyday life"
“If I could sum up the Philosophy course at Warwick in one word it would be ... modern. I found that, unlike some institutions that tend to focus only on the typical Plato and Aristotle type modules, Warwick gives you the opportunity to intertwine philosophy with your everyday life.
One of my favourite modules was ‘Philosophy through Film’ which involved investigating whether films could actually do philosophy. Although we didn’t get to swap lectures for film screenings, we had fun movie nights, thoughtful debates and eventually created our own short films which is less daunting than it sounds.
Our lecturers encourage us to genuinely investigate the aspects of philosophy that interests us so that we are constantly interested in what we study and keen to contribute our own ideas.”
Oray
BA Philosophy
Be the change you want to be
Hear from our student Luke about how he's putting into practice what he's been learning on his degree. Luke has implemented a practical solution to a problem in the local area by setting up a social enterprise to help tackle food insecurity.
About the information on this page
This information is applicable for 2021 entry. Given the interval between the publication of courses and enrolment, some of the information may change. It is important to check our website before you apply. Please read our terms and conditions to find out more.