New Mexico Doctoral Program in Geography
For more information on the doctoral program, contact Dr. Eric Magrane
The Department of Geography at New Mexico State University (NMSU) and the Department of Geography and Environmental Studies at the University of New Mexico (UNM) jointly offer a Doctor of Philosophy in Geography. This program brings together two outstanding institutions and offers a unique opportunity for doctoral study in New Mexico’s diverse and distinctive landscapes. The program offers advantages for students by merging two departments across the state and allowing students to have access to faculty and institutional resources on both campuses. The New Mexico Doctoral Program in Geography is designed to build both theoretical and applied knowledge in geography, which enables students to pursue a wide range of career pathways.
The New Mexico Doctoral Program in Geography builds upon the strengths of the two departments by providing the education, training, and experience necessary for professional careers in higher education, private industry, and government. The program offers a rigorous, research-based degree that is focused on environmental change, dryland resource management, complex cultural landscapes, and the methods needed to understand them. During the program students will learn qualitative and quantitative research methods, and how to use them in combination to create a mixed-methods approach to geographic research. Expertise in multiple methodologies requires intensive study, and applicants should carefully consider their preparation to enter a program that requires both qualitative and quantitative research proficiency.
Both campuses offer state-of-the-art technical facilities, and easy access to distinctive geographic features ranging from wilderness areas to urban centers, and the Rocky Mountains to the Chihuahuan Desert. Students reside in either Las Cruces (for NMSU) or Albuquerque (for UNM)—depending on which institution is selected as the “home” university—but students will take classes on either campus, whether remotely or in-person.
Students will travel to both campuses and experience field trips to other locations during the first-year sequence of core courses, thus gaining familiarity with two distinct communities and environments. Each student develops an individualized program of study in consultation with their dissertation committee. Individual requirements for each student are based on existing expertise and future career goals. Students will work with faculty advisors to develop a dissertation research project within the program’s three specialty areas, using appropriate research methodologies. Being a joint doctoral program, all students must have faculty from both campuses on their dissertation committee.
The program builds on existing resources and strengths at the two universities. Both departments have longstanding Master’s and Bachelor’s degree programs. On both campuses, graduate study in Geography has been characterized by a close, collegial working relationship between students and faculty. The doctoral program is delivered jointly at the two campuses, with collaborative participation from both faculties. The doctoral curriculum will evolve to adapt to ever-changing human-environment interactions, and career needs within professional geography. The program’s main regional foci are New Mexico and the broader Southwest region, the Mexico-U.S. borderlands, and Latin America.
The two geography departments have different strengths. Students will be based at the institution where the faculty can best support their research interests. The NMSU faculty specializes in applied geographic research and teaching, particularly in the fields of geographic information science, physical geography, cultural geography, and natural resource management. The UNM department specializes in basic research, and its faculty have particular expertise in geographic information science, political ecology, historical geography, health geography, and data science. To better understand research strengths within the program, please visit the admissions page for the PhD program and review the faculty pages in the department websites at UNM and NMSU.
For more information on the New Mexico Doctoraal Program in Geography, contact Dr. Eric Magrane, Graduate Programs Director at NMSU, or Dr. Maria Lane, Graduate Programs Director at UNM.