Sustainable Futures
- PhD
Overview
The interdisciplinary pathway in Sustainable Futures seeks to produce a new generation of researchers who can address the pressing social issues of sustainability in the context of global environmental change.
Sustainability research asks how ecosystems and human wellbeing can be maintained and enhanced in the long term, given rising populations, limited natural resources and a fragile environment. The field, with its clear applied focus and strong strategic future-directed policy implications, has social sciences at its heart.
The programme requires a broad interdisciplinary approach and an understanding of economics, law, the politics and psychology of sustainability, and the geography and demographics of those affected. We therefore deliberately expose students to a broad range of material to help them appreciate and understand interconnected perspectives and to provide them with skills to work effectively across disciplines. We welcome students from a wide range of disciplinary backgrounds.
Students will normally be registered in the school of their first supervisor. This may not be the school that processes your application.
Programme structure
PhD students will follow the structure of the School of their primary supervisor and attend any mandatory units as required by this, unless they are exempted from individual units after applying for Recognised Prior Learning.
ESRC/SWDTP-students may be required to take additional credits as determined by SWDTP.
Entry requirements
A minimum of an upper second class honours degree from a social sciences or law discipline, and a master's qualification, achieving at least a merit (or equivalent) with appropriate research training.
See international equivalent qualifications on the International Office website.
Read the programme admissions statement for important information on entry requirements, the application process and supporting documents required.
Go to admissions statementIf English is not your first language, you will need to reach the requirements outlined in our profile level B.
Further information about English language requirements and profile levels.
Fees and funding
- Home: full-time
- £4,850 per year
- Home: part-time
- £2,425 per year
- Overseas: full-time
- £21,300 per year
Fees are subject to an annual review. For programmes that last longer than one year, please budget for up to an 8% increase in fees each year.
More about tuition fees, living costs and financial support.
Alumni discount
University of Bristol students and graduates can benefit from a 25% reduction in tuition fees for postgraduate study. Check your eligibility for an alumni discount.
Funding and scholarships
The Faculty of Arts, Law and Social Sciences has an allocation of MSc/MRes + PhD and PhD only ESRC scholarships. The PhD in Sustainable Futures falls under the SWDTP pathway "Climate Change, Sustainability and Society" and the PhD can be combined with MSc/MRes degrees under this pathway within the Faculty. The length of these scholarships will be dependent on training needs and can vary, with the shortest generally being 3 years 6 months (for PhD only). The internal deadline to apply for admission to the PhD programme and for ESRC is: 2 December 2024. The ESRC deadline is: 12 noon 14 January 2025.
For details on applying for ESRC funding, please visit the South West Doctoral Training Partnership (SWDTP) website.
Those applying for the ESRC funded pathway "Climate Change, Sustainability & Society" apply via the PhD in Sustainable Futures.
The internal deadline to apply for admission to the PhD programme and for Bristol Postgraduate Research Scholarships is: 2 December 2024.
The Bristol Postgraduate Research Scholarships deadline is: 12 noon 24 January 2025.
Please visit the school's fees and funding web pages for further information.
Further information on funding for prospective UK and international postgraduate students.
Career prospects
The PhD in Sustainable Futures offers useful preparation for related careers in the public, private or civic sectors, as well as in academia.
In the public sector, it may open opportunities in government departments and agencies at international, national and local levels. In the private sector, it provides training and analytical skills of relevance to careers in consultancy or environmental management, for example. In the civic sector, it can lead to careers with environmental NGOs or development bodies.
Meet our supervisors
The following list shows potential supervisors for this programme. Visit their profiles for details of their research and expertise.
Research groups
The pathway draws on expertise from the schools, institutes and research centres at the Universities of Bristol, Bath, Exeter and The University of the West of England (UWE).
University of Bristol
- University of Bristol Law School and its research Centre for Environmental Law and Sustainability
- School for Policy Studies
- Global Insecurities Centre
- The Cabot Institute (which draws together environmental research from across the University).
University of Bath
- Department of Psychology
- Institute for Sustainable Energy and the Environment
- Water Innovation and Research Centre
- Centre for Research in Education and the Environment
- Centre for the Analysis of Social Policy.
University of Exeter
- Human Geography
- Climate and Society
- Energy Policy
- Governance, Ethics and Social Justice
- Law
- Centre for Energy and the Environment
- Centre for Rural Policy Research
- Climate Change and Sustainable Futures research theme.
The University of the West of England
- Centre for Transport and Society
- Centre for Sustainable Planning and Environments
- WHO Collaborating Centre for Healthy Urban Environments.
Key research interests
You will have two supervisors from different disciplinary perspectives. Your supervisors convene joint meetings regularly and attend an annual one-day workshop for all pathway students.
Contact us
- Contact
Postgraduate Admissions Administrator
- Phone
- +44 (0)
117 455 1269
law-pgr-admissions@bristol.ac.uk
- Contact
Professor Margherita Pieraccini
m.pieraccini@bristol.ac.uk