Here below you can find all master courses the University Centre offers. All courses are taught in 1-3 week modules running from August through June. See how the courses are organised in the teaching schedule for both programs. Usually 2-3 courses are taught at the same time, but students may only enroll in one course at a time.
The master courses are available to you whether you plan to pursue a degree or just take a course or courses. Please review the options for guest studies to determine how you can apply.
For further information, contact the Administrative Director of Education and Teaching.
This course is about how we engage with leisure pursuits in small coastal communities, particularly those in the Arctic. How do these communities interact with tourism on social, economic and cultural levels? What is the individual tourist-local interaction like? How about the larger system? This course relies on understanding tourism at a basic storytelling level; and putting that into larger contexts.
Students will analyse the impact of tourism at their doorstep and create photo essays, go on field trips and produce their own digital story or short movie.
completed his PhD in New Zealand, with fieldwork in Antarctica, and since then has held a number of academic positions in Canada. His research has many strands, but in tourism it's mostly about understanding the meanings that visitors take back from their expedition experiences and how that shapes their "real life".
This course examines the impact of rising tourism figures and second home ownership in coastal communities. Changes of the local economic foundation, social structure, culture and individual interactions of coastal communities will be highlighted. This course provides an overview of tourism in coastal/marine areas and includes topics such as: shared resource use and management; sovereignty tensions; adventure and expeditionary tourism; the logistical challenges of operating in remote marine environments; and the impacts tourism may have on the sustainability of the communities and environments in the region.
On completion of the course, a student: