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Nature Recovery, Restoration and RewildingMSc (1 year)
Duration
12 months (full-time), 24 months (part-time) Fee
MSc (full-time)UK students (per annum): £13,500International, including EU, students (per annum): £29,000
12 months (full-time), 24 months (part-time) Fee
MSc (full-time)UK students (per annum): £13,500International, including EU, students (per annum): £29,000
Overview
For a detailed overview of this course, including core modules and unique features, you can download ourCourse Guide (PDF).
Humanity has caused a global biodiversity crisis, with wildlife populations declining and over one million species facing extinction. The UN urges everyone to rethink their relationship with nature and adopt transformative solutions to recover, restore, and rewild ecosystems.
The MSc in Nature Recovery, Restoration, and Rewilding (NR3) equips you with the knowledge, skills, and global best practices needed to address the biodiversity crisis. It also covers the broader benefits of these solutions, including tackling the climate crisis and improving human health and wellbeing.
Through small class learning and field work, this course will equip you with a ‘toolbox’ of knowledge and techniques to transform humanity’s relationship with nature. You will acquire understanding and practical skills relating to naturerecovery, a suite of tools that aim to benefit nature not just minimise harm, which are being applied in sectors normally linked to biodiversity declines like agriculture and urban development.
Whilst studying this programme, you will see ecologicalrestorationfirst-hand in uplands, wetlands and forests, learning about practical restoration techniques that repair natural processes and help ecosystems recover after human-induced damage.
You will also be immersed in the theory and practice ofrewilding, an exciting approach seeking to give nature more independence over large areas, including reintroducing organisms that can ‘engineer’ ecosystems. Throughout your studies, you will enquire, debate and evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of these different approaches, exploring theoretical, ethical and practical perspectives.
Aside from the University of Manchester being a top ranked Higher Education institution, the city has been at the heart of industrial development since the growth of the cotton trade in the late 18th century. The expansion of Manchester has been the forerunner of global urbanisation, which has prioritised economic growth at the expense of the natural environment.
This has not just affected cities, but also the surrounding landscapes that provide natural and social capital to fuel growth, and a wider impact on unconnected areas with a requirement for intensive agricultural practices needed to support a growing human population.
By studying nature recovery, restoration and rewilding in the city that kickstarted urbanisation, students coming to Manchester will be immersed in an excellent example of the global challenge of sustainable development.
During the MSc, students will gain a diverse and rich experience that will enable them to make a real-world impact. Our cohort of students draw from backgrounds representing an array of disciplinary knowledge. This is a crucial aspect of the degree because developing solutions to our environmental crises will require interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approaches.
Students will be provided with a diverse portfolio of learning opportunities. This will include lectures and seminars given by academics and guest speakers with expertise in the arena of transformative conservation, delivering a blend of philosophical, ethical and applied perspectives. Real-world understanding will be gained through field visits to chosen case studies that are delivering positive outcomes for people and nature.
Finally, students will learn a diverse array of practical skills that are transferable to a wide range of environmental careers, such as data analytics, ecological survey techniques, and geographical information systems. Students are also able to tailor their experience according to their personal ambitions through optional course units from across The University of Manchester, as well as embarking on a research project of their choosing.
The course is taught by world-leading researchers, including:
Need help?
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