Master of Sustainability

2024 Deakin University Handbook

Year

2024 course information

Award granted Master of Sustainability
Deakin course codeS727
Faculty

Faculty of Science, Engineering and Built Environment

CampusOffered at Burwood (Melbourne)
OnlineYes
Duration1.5 years full-time or part-time equivalent
Course Map - enrolment planning tool

These course maps are for new students commencing from Trimester 1 2024

These course maps are for new students commencing from Trimester 2 2024

Course maps for commencement in previous years are available on the Course Maps webpage or please contact a Student Adviser in Student Central.

CRICOS course code108875G Burwood (Melbourne)
Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF) recognition

The award conferred upon completion is recognised in the Australian Qualifications Framework at Level 9

Course sub-headings

Course overview

Do you want to build a rewarding career affecting positive change? Study Deakin's Master of Sustainability and gain the skills to address national and global sustainability issues and implement strategies that balance environmental, social and economic considerations.

Graduates of Deakin's Master of Sustainability are well positioned to engage in the development and implementation of practical solutions to complex sustainability challenges and may choose to seek employment in government roles, non-government organisations or in the private sector.

Want the skills to develop and implement sustainability strategies across a range of sectors?

Globalisation, population growth and climate change are dramatically impacting the natural environments, economies, and societies of the world. A key focus of the Master of Sustainability is developing an in depth understanding of the Sustainable Development Goals, which every member country of the United Nations is committed to achieving by 2030.

The flexible structure of the course provides you with the opportunity to build the degree for the career you want. You’ll first acquire a solid foundation in sustainability before tailoring your studies through the pursuit of a specialisation in either Environmental Management, Health and Environment or Sustainable Regional Development. You will also have the option to either undertake industry practice or further broaden your skills through your choice of course elective units.

Connections to industry are an integral part of this course and ensures you have the opportunity to gain an industry perspective and establish professional networks prior to graduation. Guest lectures from key industry partners are embedded into the course to provide you with an understanding of sustainability issues in a real-world context.

Indicative student workload

Approximately 150 hours of learning and assessment activities per Deakin credit point.

Students will have access to a range of elective units from a variety of relevant discipline areas across the Faculty and University. This will allow them to tailor a program relevant to their specific interests, subject to academic approval.

Career opportunities

As a graduate of this course you will be equipped with the skills to build a rewarding career affecting positive change. You will be well positioned to engage in the development and implementation of practical solutions to the complex sustainability challenges and may choose to seek employment in government roles, non-government organisations or in the private sector.

Depending on your elected area of expertise, you may choose to pursue employment as an officer, manager or consultant in areas including environmental protection, cultural and natural heritage management, environmental conservation, land and water management, natural resource management, agriculture, communication and planning.

Participation requirements

Elective units may be selected that include compulsory placements, work-based training, community-based learning or collaborative research training arrangements.

Reasonable adjustments to participation and other course requirements will be made for students with a disability. More information available at Disability support services.

Mandatory student checks

Any unit which contains work integrated learning, a community placement or interaction with the community may require a police check, Working with Children Check or other check.

Pathways

Upon completion of the Master of Sustainability you could use the credit points you’ve earned to enter into the Master of Sustainability (Professional) (S728)

Alternative exits

Graduate Certificate of Sustainability (S527)
Graduate Diploma of Sustainability (S627)

Fees and charges

Fees and charges vary depending on the type of fee place you hold, your course, your commencement year, the units you choose to study and their study discipline, and your study load.

Tuition fees increase at the beginning of each calendar year and all fees quoted are in Australian dollars ($AUD). Tuition fees do not include textbooks, computer equipment or software, other equipment or costs such as mandatory checks, travel and stationery.

Use the Fee estimator to see course and unit fees applicable to your course and type of place. For further information regarding tuition fees, other fees and charges, invoice due dates, withdrawal dates, payment methods visit our Current students website.

Course Learning Outcomes

Deakin Graduate Learning Outcomes

Course Learning Outcomes

Discipline-specific knowledge and capabilities

Demonstrate mastery and specialist knowledge of natural and social sciences related to sustainability, environmental management, health and environment and sustainable regional development.

Demonstrate well-developed judgement and responsibility to review, analyse and develop sustainability strategies based on holistic principles.

Communication

Present a reasoned argument that highlights essential details of sustainability, environmental management and sustainable regional development, theory and application, key observations, results and conclusions of scientific research in a professional manner using appropriate style, language and references including local, national, and international contributions or contexts.

Apply listening skills and effective communication skills to accommodate, encourage and answer questions from a range of audience and to defend research/project findings and sustainability implementation propositions.

Interpret the boundaries or limits of social and scientific information, data, discuss error, probability, uncertainty, conclusions and arguments to justify theoretical propositions, methodologies, methods, techniques, conclusions and professional decisions.

Digital literacy

Use well-developed technical skills, judgement and responsibility to independently locate, analyse, evaluate the merits of, synthesise and disseminate sustainability data, information and literature in the planning and implementation of projects to a range of stakeholders in sustainability, environmental management and sustainable regional development.

Reflect on information, data and results and develop strategies for disseminating research outcomes in a digital world.

Critical thinking

Appraise complex social, economic and scientific methodologies and information from a broad range of interdisciplinary sources using critical, analytical and logical reasoning from multiple perspectives for evaluating and providing solutions to sustainability issues that incorporate the holistic principles.

Formulate research questions to test and/ or contest ideas, concepts and theoretical propositions through an evidence-based well-structured project.

Problem solving

Plan and implement sustainability research investigation by using traditional and emerging techniques and technologies to identify problems and by applying analysis and synthesis skills, and triple-bottom line principles to solve research and/or practical problems.

Demonstrate complex problem-solving skills by identifying and creating solutions to real world sustainability through social, economic and/or scientific inquiry.

Contribute to advancements in scientific knowledge through mastery in the use of traditional and emerging instruments and techniques to device an investigation, and in the collection, interpretation, analysis, synthesis and dissemination of issues pertaining to the identification of issues and solutions to improve sustainability in general and/or environmental management and/or sustainable regional development.

Self-management

Take personal, professional and social responsibility within changing national and international professional contexts to develop autonomy as researchers and evaluate own performances.

Work autonomously, responsibly and safely to solve unstructured problems and actively apply knowledge of social frameworks and scientific methodologies to make informed choices based on the triple-bottom line principles.

Teamwork

Work independently and collaboratively with advice from the supervisor towards achieving the outcomes of a project and thereby demonstrate interpersonal skills including the ability to brainstorm, negotiate, resolve conflicts, managing difficult and awkward conversations, provide constructive feedback and work in diverse professional, social and cultural contexts.

Global citizenship

Apply principles of sustainability and environmental management knowledge and skills with a high level of autonomy, judgement, responsibility and accountability in collaboration with the supervisor to articulate the place and importance of social and scientific inquiry in the local and global context.

Approved by Faculty Board 26 July 2023

Course rules

To complete the Master of Sustainability, students must attain 12 credit points, which must include the following:

  • DAI001 Academic Integrity Module (0-credit point compulsory unit)
  • STP710 Career Tools for Employability (0-credit point compulsory unit)
  • three (3) core units (3 credit points)
  • 1 specialisation (4 credit points)
  • a five (5) credit point pathway in:
    • Advanced discipline coursework pathway OR
    • Industry practice pathway (subject to meeting unit requirements).

Students are required to meet the University's academic progress and conduct requirements.

Specialisations

Refer to the details of each specialisation for availability.

Course structure

Core

Year 1

DAI001Academic Integrity Module (0 credit points)

STP710Career Tools for Employability (0 credit points)

SLE761Professional Research Practice

SLE756Sustainability in the Anthropocene

SLE757Environmental Science and Global Change

Plus a four (4) credit point specialisation

Plus one unit from:

Advanced discipline coursework pathway

One (1) credit point from the course elective list from the list below.

OR

Industry practice pathway

SLE767Industry Practice Planning

Pathway options

Year 2

Advanced discipline coursework pathway

Four (4) course elective units (4 credit points) from the list below.

OR

Industry practice pathway

SLE766Industry Practice (4 credit points)

Course elective units

S728 Master of Sustainability (Professional) and S727 Master of Sustainability students can choose any units from the list below to fill the course elective unit options (subject to meeting unit requirements).

Course elective units may also be chosen from the remaining specialisations (ie students enrolled in the Environmental Management specialisation may choose electives from within the Health and Environment specialisation).

Strategic futures thinking

SRA743Critical Futures

Food and land system

ADH712Food and Water Security

HMF701Agricultural Health and Medicine

HMF702Healthy and Sustainable Agricultural Communities

HSN706Policy and Practice for Healthy and Sustainable Food Systems

International development

ADH717Climate Change and Sustainability

ADS701Introduction to International and Community Development

ADS705Participatory and Community Development Practice

AHA724Disaster Risk Reduction and Community Led Recovery

Cultural heritage

AIM708World Heritage

AIM720Sustainability and Human Rights in Heritage and Museums

AIM703Heritage Practice: Conservation and Managing Change

AIM709Intangible Cultural Heritage

Cities

SRT757Building Systems and Environment

SET721Engineering Sustainability

Data science for sustainability

MIS770Foundation Skills in Data Analysis

SIT741Statistical Data Analysis

SIT718Real World Analytics

DMC713-OD Life Cycle Assessment: A Practical Introduction (0.5 credit points) ^

Environmental crime

ACR706Environmental Crime and Regulation

Working with communities

HSH736Community Consultation and Participation

ADS705Participatory and Community Development Practice

ADS701Introduction to International and Community Development

Global geopolitics and sustainability

AIR701China and the World

AIR707The United Nations and International Organisation

AIR717International Conflict Analysis

AIR720Transnational Activism and Policy

AIR726Human Rights in World Politics

Policy and governance

AIP704Making Policy

AIP740Policy Lessons From Overseas

AIP748Intergovernmental Relations: Federalism, Power and Multi-Level Governance

AIP773Governance and Accountability in Turbulent Times

AIP780Governing the Economy: Wealth and Inequality in Australia

ADS722Private Sector Development: Corporations, Social-Enterprise and Microfinance

Humanitarian development

ADH701The Humanitarian World

ADH714Gender, Race and Culture

Communicating and influencing

ALR718Public Relations, Activism and Social Change

ALR782Public Affairs and Opinion Formation

ADS715Cross Cultural Communication and Practice

Professional studies

SLE763Research Project Planning

SLE767Industry Practice Planning

^ This unit is 0.5cp. Students choosing this elective must also undertake a microcredential unit from the Health and Environment specialisation to make up to 1 credit point.

Work experience

Students will have an opportunity to complete work experience as part of the industry practice pathway.

Details of specialisations

Environmental Management

Campuses

Burwood (Melbourne), Online


Unit set code

SP-S000084


Overview

Environmental Management involves a multidisciplinary approach to examining why environmental impacts occur and developing appropriate solutions to managing these impacts. Contemporary approaches require a multifaceted combination of techniques that address environmental, social and economic issues. Balancing resources and employment against environmental impacts requires specialised knowledge and skills, such that environmental managers need to be able to understand government policy direction, legislative compliance issues and analyse risk to the environment, often on a global scale. This specialisation prepares students to address the unique issues and challenges faced in this field.


Units

SLE720Risk Assessment and Control

SLE715Circular Economy

SLE716Environmental Protection

SLE725Environmental Management Systems

Health and Environment

Campuses

Burwood (Melbourne), Online


Unit set code

SP-S000097


Overview

Human health and wellbeing is intricately linked to the health of the natural environment. Climate change, environmental degradation and unsustainable living are causing a range of physical and mental health impacts that require evidence-based, systems thinking and co-designed interventions. This specialisation enhances your understanding of the complex relationship between human health and the environment through exploration of topics in public health, health promotion, health equity and human rights, social impact assessments, and community consultation and participation.


Units

HSH701Principles and Practice of Public Health

HSH703Health Promotion

HMC703-OD Promoting Human and Planetary Health (0.5 credit points) ^

Plus one from:

HSH736Community Consultation and Participation

HSH728Health Equity and Human Rights

Plus one from:

MMC706-OD Change tools (0.5 credit points) ^
MMC705-OD Innovation and leadership (0.5 credit points) ^

^ Students complete these Deakin approved microcredentials (Stackable Short Courses) to count towards the Health and Environment specialisation. These fully online microcredentials suit professionals with busy lives and work commitments, allowing you to complete microcredentials anytime and anywhere. Please refer to Microcredential learner support for more information.

Sustainable Regional Development

Campuses

Burwood (Melbourne), Online


Unit set code

SP-S000082


Overview

Sustainable Regional Development is critical to the economic performance of both developed and developing countries, especially in the face of globalisation, population growth, economic structural adjustments and climate change. Two thirds of Australia’s export earnings come from regional industries such as agriculture, tourism, retail, services and manufacturing. As such, demand has risen sharply for professionals with the ability to undertake regional socioeconomic and environmental planning that looks to the long-term competitive advantages of regional areas, and propose appropriate policy responses.

The specialisation is appropriate for developed and developing country contexts, and the second year research project can be focused on international (overseas) regional development situations. Graduates will develop an in-depth understanding of the key biophysical, socioeconomic, geographic and infrastructure factors that influence the development of regions, as well as the strategic and technological tools to analyse and act on information to sustainably guide regional economic development.


Units

SLE740Climate Change, Adaptation and Mitigation

SLE741Regional Development Economics and Planning

SLE742Systems and Strategic Thinking

SLE743Regional Development Modelling

Other course information

Course duration

Course duration may be affected by delays in completing course requirements, such as accessing or completing work placements.

Further information

Student Central can help you with course planning, choosing the right units and explaining course rules and requirements.