Where Will You Make Your Impact?

Understand The World. Shape Your Future.

From climate resilience to global justice, NUS Geographers learn from today’s problems to design tomorrow’s solutions. Through an interdisciplinary curriculum that integrates physical and human geography, students examine real-world challenges across local, regional, and global contexts. Grounded in research and practice, NUS Geography equips learners with the critical and applied skills needed to shape more equitable and resilient futures.

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Climate Change

How do we respond to a warming world?
Analyse climate impacts and adaptation strategies to drive solutions in policy, planning, and environmental consultancy.

sustainable-development (1)

Sustainable Development

How can we live well on a damaged planet?
Evaluate and design pathways for balancing growth, equity, and environment to shape sustainable futures across public and private sectors.

justice (1)

Globalisation & Inequality

Is there hope for the future?
Examine how global flows of power, trade, and culture create uneven geographies, opening pathways into public policy, urban and corporate consultancy.

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Our Everyday Worlds

How do we create meaningful worlds for ourselves and others?
Explore how identities, practices, and cultures shape everyday spaces and places, building skills for careers in planning, community engagement, marketing and project management.

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Geospatial Intelligence

Want to see the world in 4D?
Apply spatial analysis, mapping, and data visualisation to solve real-world challenges in industry, government, and academia.

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The Geographical Sciences

Want to shape the world, literally?
Study Earth’s dynamic systems to build skills in analysis and field research, leading to careers in environmental consultancy, resource management and conservation, and sustainability planning.

Politics, Economies And Space

Stressor Source as a New Dimension of Emotional Political Ecologies: The Case of Corn Belt Farm Stress in the United States

Nichols, C. E. (2026).
Annals of the American Association of Geographers

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Social Cultural Geographies

The spatiality of performative authenticity on social media: A geographical understanding of young African fashion microcelebrities

Xiao, A. H., & Yan, Q. (2026).
Geographical Research / Wiley

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Tropical Environmental Change

Shifting paradigms: towards dynamic approaches to sustain Anthropocene lake ecosystems

Zhang, K., Gillson, L., McGowan, S., Finch, J., Liu, Z., Shen, J., Meadows, M.E. & Taylor, D. (2026)
Science Bulletin/Elsevier

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Geographic Information Systems

Urban AI for a sustainable built environment: Progress and future directions

Knoblauch, S., Li, H., Biljecki, F., Li, W., & Zipf, A. (2026).
Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science

View Paper

News & Happenings

NUS Geography Now

The Department of Geography proudly hosted the 30th NUS Geography Challenge, a landmark edition that welcomed nearly 500 students from over 120 secondary schools across Singapore. Centred on the theme City for Tomorrow: Shaping Our Liveable Future, the event showcased the creativity and geographical thinking of the next generation.

The milestone event was also featured by Mediacorp's 8world.


Applications are now open for a funded PhD position in Urban Climate Modelling at the Urban Climate Lab, focused on advancing urban weather and climate modelling for tropical environments like Singapore.

Interested candidates can find out more here. Application deadline is 15 May 2026 for the January 2027 intake.


Asia’s First Bachelor’s Programme in Geospatial Intelligence: The Department of Geography, together with the School of Computing, will launch Asia’s first Bachelor’s-level programme in Geospatial Intelligence. The programme combines spatial thinking, data science, and advanced geospatial technologies to equip students to address complex real-world challenges, from urban planning to climate resilience.

Upcoming Events

(c) Rod Searcey
Seminar

“Reckoning the urban: Cold War legacies and contemporary urban politics in Southeast Asia” by Professor Gavin Shatkin, LKCF Visiting Fellow on Tuesday, 14 April 2026, 2-3:30PM, Research Division Seminar Room, AS7 06-42.

Register Here
FS Publicity (1)
Field Studies 2026 - Official Registrations Open!

GE3230A is a 5-week, 8-unit overseas field course conducted in Southeast Asia during Special Term 1 (12 May - 18 June 2026). Students interested in enrolling can officially register for the course via the link below.

Register Here
January 22, 2026

Arts for All enriches arts community within and beyond NUS

Two years after it was piloted in late 2023, the Arts for All (AFA) initiative is making waves in NUS, enabling students to embed the arts into their student life and learning journey – and beyond, through outreach efforts to younger musicians across Singapore.

January 20, 2026

When seniors live alone, it doesn’t mean they are lonely

Living alone in later life is often treated as a signal of social risk. The one-person household is easy to identify in administrative data and, as a result, frequently used as a proxy for loneliness in policy and service delivery. However, this assumption can be misleading. In the opinion piece ‘When seniors live alone, it […]

January 13, 2026

When seniors live alone, it doesn’t mean that they’re lonely

By Associate Professor Vincent Chua (NUS Sociology and Anthropology), Professor Elaine Ho Lynn-Ee (NUS Geography) and Associate Professor Feng Chen-Chieh (NUS Geography).

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