MSC 01 1110
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque,NM87131
Physical Location:
Bandelier West & East
(505)277-5041
Phone:(505)277-3614
Fax:geography@unm.edu
MSC 01 1110
1 University of New Mexico
Albuquerque,NM87131
Physical Location:
Bandelier West & East
(505)277-5041
Phone:(505)277-3614
Fax:geography@unm.edu
Graduate Advisor
Chris Duvall
duvall@unm.edu
Graduate applicants direct correspondence to Graduate Advisor.
Program Application Deadlines:
Fall: | February 1st, with consideration of financial aid |
A Master’s degree is offered under bothPlan IandPlan IIas described in theGraduate Programsection of this Catalog. Any student planning to go on for a Ph.D. is strongly urged to take Plan I and write a thesis. A minor may be taken under either plan with the approval of the Geography and Environmental Studies Department’s Graduate Advisory Committee. In place of a minor, approved courses in related fields may be substituted.
Minimum requirements for the M.S. in Geography degree are as follows:
Credit Hours |
||
GEOG 501 | History and Methods in Geography | 3 |
GEOG 502 | Approaches to Geographic Research | 3 |
Plan I | Concentration in Environmental Studies | |
(Additional courses) | ||
GEOG 514 | Natural Resources Management Seminar or | |
GEOG 515 | Cultural and Political Ecology or | |
GEOG 516 | Seminar: Globalization or | |
GEOG 517 | Law and Geography | 3 |
Two additional courses from the Environmental Studies List: *445, 514, 515, 516, 517, 561, 562, 563, 564, 566, 567 | 6 | |
One course from the GIScience List: *481L, 525, 580L, 581L, 582L, 583L, 584L, 585L, 586L, 587L, 588L | 3-4 | |
Two elective courses | 6 | |
Thesis | 6 | |
Total | 30-31 | |
Plan I | Concentration in Geographic Information Science | |
(Additional courses) | ||
GEOG 525 | Seminar: Geographic Information Science | 3 |
Three courses from the GIScience List: *481L, 580L, 581L, 582L, 583L, 584L, 585L, 586L, 587L, 588L | 9-11 | |
One course from the Environmental Studies List: *445, 514, 515, 516, 517, 561, 562, 563, 564, 566, 567 | 3 | |
One elective course | 3 | |
Thesis | 6 | |
Total | 30-32 | |
Plan II | Concentration in Environmental Studies | |
(Additional courses) | ||
GEOG 514 | Natural Resources Management Seminar or | |
GEOG 515 | Cultural and Political Ecology or | |
GEOG 516 | Seminar: Globalization or | |
GEOG 517 | Law and Geography | 3 |
Three additional courses from the Environmental Studies List: *445, 514, 515, 516, 517, 561, 562, 563, 564, 566, 567 | 9 | |
One course from the GIScience List: *481L, 580L, 581L, 582L, 583L, 584L, 585L, 586L, 587L, 588L | 3-4 | |
GEOG 597 | Master's Project | 3 |
Three elective courses | 9 | |
Total | 33-34 | |
Plan II | Concentration in Geographic Information Science | |
(Additional courses) | ||
GEOG 525 | Seminar: Geographic Information Science | 3 |
Four courses from the GIScience List: *481L, 580L, 581L, 582L, 583L, 584L, 585L, 586L, 587L, 588L | 12-14 | |
Two courses from the Environmental Studies List: *445, 514, 515, 516, 517, 561, 562, 563, 564, 566, 567 | 6 | |
GEOG 597 | Master's Project | 3 |
One elective course | 3 | |
Total | 33-35 |
Candidates under Plan I are examined orally on their thesis. Candidates under Plan II are examined orally on the advanced research project assigned in GEOG 597 by his or her graduate committee from the two areas listed below.
A graduate student who elects to pursue a Master’s degree in geography should have either an undergraduate degree in geography (or related field) or be prepared to make up deficiencies as determined by the Geography and Environmental Studies Department’s Graduate Advisory Committee. Students must select an advisor who helps them design their programs and guide them through their tenure in the department. All programs are subject to approval by the Graduate Advisory Committee. Students must earn grades of B (3.0 GPA) or better in all courses on their plan of study, including those at the undergraduate level. GRE scores are required for application to the M.S. program.
The Department of Geography and Environmental Studies and the Department of Economics offer a Shared-Credit Degrees Program. The Program enables completion a B.A. in Economics with one of three minors from Geography and Environmental Studies, and an M.S. in Geography in five years of study.
I. General Requirements
II. Undergraduate Requirements in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
III. Undergraduate Requirements in the Department of Economics
IV. Graduate Requirements in the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies
V. General Terms
Certificate Director: John Carr
The graduate certificate in Law, Environment, and Geography seeks to provide students both tools and analytic frames for understanding the spatial and legal dimensions of environmental dynamics and challenges. While the law can be a powerful tool for addressing issues of environmental regulation and resource management, the ways we write and enforce our laws can substantially impact environmental dynamics. The spatial dimensions of these impacts, and the inherent spatiality of legal regulatory concerns are pressing concerns for environmental researchers and policy makers. By offering a curriculum that stresses these interconnections, the graduate certificate in Law, Environment, and Geography empowers students to ask critical questions about how human regulation and environmental dynamics play out in a variety of scales.
Requirements and Qualifications
Students must be either:
Students who are not currently enrolled as degree-seeking graduate students at the University must apply to and be accepted for admissions by the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies.
Application Deadlines
Fall: | March 1 |
Spring: | November 1 |
Application Submission Requirements
These materials should demonstrate (1) serious initial investigation and/or interest in environmental law and/or regulatory issues, (2) strong academic credentials, (3) ability to write cogently, and (4) a clear and compelling set of goals.
The Certificate Director may waive any of the above requirements if the application as a whole demonstrates that the student has the skills, background, and ability to successfully complete the graduate certificate.
The Graduate Certificate in Law, Environment, and Geography requires 18 credit hours of upper-division course work. Topics must be approved by the Certificate Director in advance. All electives should be chosen in consultation with the Certificate Director. Only 3 hours of course work taken as credit/no credit may be applied towards the certificate.
| Credit Hours |
|
Required Geography Course | 3 | |
GEOG 517 | Law and Geography | |
Elective Geography Courses |
9 | |
Select from: |
||
GEOG 514 | Natural Resources Management Seminar | |
GEOG 515 | Cultural and Political Ecology | |
GEOG 561 | Environmental Management | |
GEOG 562 | Water Resources Management | |
GEOG 563 | Public Lands Management | |
GEOG 564 | Food and Natural Resources | |
Elective Non-Geography Courses | 6 | |
Select from: | ||
AMST 520 | T: Environment, Science and Technology | |
AMST 523 | Environmentalism of the Poor | |
CRP 515 | Natural Resources Field Methods | |
CRP 527 | Watershed Management | |
CRP 532 | Foundations of Natural Resources | |
ECON 542 | Topics in Environmental, Resource, and Ecological Economics | |
ECON 545 | Water Resources II - Models | |
ECON 546 | Water Resources I - Contemporary Issues | |
HIST 633 | US Environmental History | |
HIST 638 | American Legal History Before 1877 | |
LAW 547 | Water Law | |
LAW 554 | Indian Water Law | |
LAW 565 | Natural Resources | |
LAW 575 | Western Water Policy | |
LAW 578 | Natural Resources: Indian Country | |
LAW 580 | Environmental Law | |
LAW 593 | T: Law | |
LAW 635 | Land Use Regulation | |
Total | 18 |