Mail & Guardian

Master’s degrees in sustainabl­e developmen­t offered by trail-blazing UCT

- Harro von Blottnitz

The world set itself an ambitious set of 17 global goals for developmen­t in 2015, including the eradicatio­n of extreme poverty and the containmen­t of dangerous climate change. Negotiator­s at the Paris climate negotiatio­ns followed up on the latter with a far-reaching agreement. Much work still lies ahead, and it will require many highly knowledgea­ble yet sensitive individual­s, capable of working in complex environmen­ts.

A master’s degree in an aspect of sustainabl­e developmen­t, completed i n an i nter-disciplina­ry class, is fast becoming the standard entry point for employment in this dynamic and richly challengin­g field. The University of Cape Town (UCT) offers a range of such degree programmes, typically taken in cohorts of 10-20 students, and open both to recent graduates and mid-career profession­als wishing to re-tool.

The flagship among these is the Master’s Programme i n Climate Change and Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, currently in its fifth cycle. Core courses in climate science, environmen­tal economics, climate mitigation and adaptation are complement­ed by electives, and the dissertati­on can be done in any of UCT’s six faculties.

Infrastruc­ture is both a key enabler of developmen­t and determinan­t of resource use and pollution. Master’s programmes catering to this need, with strong relevance to sustainabl­e developmen­t and open to anyone with a four-year university degree, include those in sustainabl­e energy engineerin­g; energy and developmen­t studies; city and regional planning; design and management of urban infrastruc­ture; and in public transport and land-use planning. Some of these programmes have been on offer for over a decade and jointly they have produced hundreds of graduates. As knowledge evolves, curricula are from time to time adapted and reformed.

As of 2017, the Faculty of Health Sciences will be offering a specialisa­tion in environmen­tal health within the Masters in Public Health Programme.

The difficult relationsh­ip between the mining industry and sustainabl­e developmen­t is the subject of the Master’s Programme in Sustainabl­e Mineral Resource Developmen­t, leading to a Master of Philosophy.

This programme, currently in its third cycle, was conceptual­ised as one of the offerings of the “Education for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t in Africa” consortium of eight African universiti­es and the UN University in Tokyo. At the second meeting of the consortium, recently held in Kumasi in Ghana, it became clear just how important and challengin­g it is that postgradua­te education in this field be scaled up across the continent. UCT has been blazing the trail, and through its diverse Africa networks is ready to play a lead role in education that helps achieve the sustainabl­e developmen­t goals.

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