Subject guides / Environmental Policy
Environmental Policy
Also appears in programme titles as: Environmental Governance · Environment and Development
What an environmental policy degree actually is
Air-quality rules, biodiversity law, water rights, the permitting fights that decide whether anything gets built — environmental policy is the broad field of governing how societies use nature, of which climate is only the loudest chapter. A master's here trains you to draft, evaluate and litigate the rules: it is law and economics applied to ecosystems.
The programme names never quite say this. LSE splits the field across Environmental Policy and Regulation and Environment and Development; Oxford calls it Environmental Change and Policy; Cambridge hides a nine-month MPhil inside its Department of Land Economy. King's approaches from the science side. If climate governance specifically is your goal, that guide covers the narrower field — this one is the broader toolbox.
What you study — and the quantitative bar
Expect environmental economics, environmental law and regulation, and policy analysis as the recurring cores — Cambridge makes law, economics and methods compulsory before its options in energy, urban planning and land policy. The development-flavoured routes (LSE's Environment and Development) add Global South political economy; the science-flavoured ones add earth-systems courses.
The quantitative bar sits between the policy and economics fields: microeconomics and statistics are assumed, econometrics is taught rather than required. Lawyers and natural scientists both enter successfully; each finds the other half of the curriculum to be the work.
Where it leads
Environment ministries and regulators, multilateral environment programmes (UNEP, World Bank environment teams), environmental consultancies doing impact assessment and permitting, and the sustainability and compliance functions that every large developer and manufacturer now staffs. The regulatory skill set — reading law, pricing externalities, writing enforceable rules — is the durable core; it transfers into climate, water, waste and biodiversity work as political attention rotates.
Who it suits — and who it does not
A good fit if you are…
- Public-sector and NGO professionals in environment, land, water or energy agencies formalising their toolkit
- Lawyers and economists specialising into environmental regulation
- Applicants wanting the broad environmental toolbox rather than the climate-specific track
Probably not the right degree if…
- Applicants whose focus is squarely emissions and carbon markets — the Climate Governance guide covers that narrower, faster-growing track
- Natural scientists who want to keep doing science: this field is rules and institutions, not research
- Anyone allergic to legal texts — half the curriculum is regulation
Where to study it: the programme map
Five programmes, five different framings — regulation, development, change-and-policy, science-and-policy, and land economy. The Cambridge row is the one applicants most often miss; its department name hides one of the field's strongest nine-month degrees.
| University | Official programme title | Length | Tuition (intl) | Experience |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| King's College LondonUnited Kingdom | Climate Change: Environment, Science and Policy MSc | 12 mo | — | — |
| London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited Kingdom | MSc Environmental Policy and Regulation | 12 mo | — | — |
| London School of Economics and Political ScienceUnited Kingdom | MSc Environment and Development | 12 mo | — | — |
| University College LondonUnited Kingdom | Economics and Policy of Energy and the Environment MSc | 12 mo | GBP 39,200 | — |
| University of CambridgeUnited Kingdom | MPhil in Environmental Policy | 9 mo | — | — |
| University of OxfordUnited Kingdom | MSc in Environmental Change and Policy | 12 mo | — | — |
Every row verified against the official programme page; oldest verification 15 Jul 2026. Nothing here is a paid placement.
Application strategy and funding routes
Cambridge's MPhil is the quiet standout for scholarship applicants: nine months, law-and-economics core, and the Land Economy address keeps it off most applicants' radar — a genuinely lower-competition route into Cambridge. LSE's pair splits by audience (regulation for developed-market careers, environment-and-development for Global South careers); Oxford's programme leans research.
Every UK programme in the map fits Chevening's length rule — this field has no LSE-MPA-style trap. DAAD's EPOS list is dense with environmental-management courses for developing-country applicants, and Commonwealth's climate-resilience theme reads environmental policy applications generously. Cambridge applicants are automatically considered for Gates Cambridge and Cambridge Trust by applying before the course funding deadline.
Which scholarship funds which programme
Computed from each scheme's published rules (destination, level, course length) — not a guarantee; list-based schemes still require checking the official list.
- King's College London
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- London School of Economics and Political Science
- University College London
- University of Cambridge
- University of Oxford
- King's College London — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Economics and Political Science — study destination outside the scheme
- London School of Economics and Political Science — study destination outside the scheme
- University College London — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Cambridge — study destination outside the scheme
- University of Oxford — study destination outside the scheme
- King's College London — only at cambridge
- London School of Economics and Political Science — only at cambridge
- London School of Economics and Political Science — only at cambridge
- University College London — only at cambridge
- University of Cambridge
- University of Oxford — only at cambridge
Frequently asked questions
Environmental policy vs climate governance — which guide am I in?
This is the broader field: biodiversity, water, land, pollution and climate together. Climate governance is the emissions-and-carbon-markets subfield with its own guide. If your target roles say "climate" in the title, start there; if they say "environment", start here.
Do I need a science background?
No — the core disciplines are economics and law. Science graduates are welcome and common, but they spend the year learning regulation and economics rather than more science.
Does Chevening fund these degrees?
Yes — unusually, every UK programme in our map runs 9–12 months, so all of them sit inside Chevening's length rule, including Cambridge's nine-month MPhil.
Is the Cambridge MPhil really easier to get into?
"Easier" overstates it — but sitting inside the Department of Land Economy keeps it off standard search paths, and applicant pools are smaller than for identically-ranked programmes with obvious names. Discovery friction is real admissions arbitrage; that is much of what our programme maps are for.
Related fields
Sources
Official programme pages (linked per row above) · official scholarship rules and participating-programme lists · university admission regulations. Every data row records its source URL and verification date; stale rows are re-checked or removed.
Global Study Prep is independent and not affiliated with any university or scholarship programme. Programme details change — always confirm on the official page before applying.