We live in an urban world. Cities and city-regions around the globe face pressing social and environmental challenges linked to the climate crisis, emerging infectious disease, global displacement and migration, and deepening inequalities and racial divides. But cities are also the places where solutions to these problems can be found. In Cities, Regions, Planning, you learn to apply inclusive and sustainable planning interventions, consulting skills, governance and political procedures and activist tools to manage urban growth (and decline), provide infrastructure, integrate newcomers, and mitigate environmental impacts.
The Cities, Regions, Planning program examines how cities and regions may be planned in more just and sustainable ways through three thematic concentrations:
- Urban Worlds - engages with different ways of being in cities around the planet to consider how urban residents live, work and play in a rapidly changing global geography of interconnected urban places.
- Urban Planning and Politics - deals with the institutions, actors, struggles and processes that help create and govern communities, cities, regions, and urban networks.
- Urban Political Ecology - focuses on the role of nature and environment in the process of urbanization, urban form and urban life.
Taught by internationally recognized urban scholars and planning practitioners, students acquire the foundational knowledge, critical thinking and technical skills to create tangible change in urban, suburban and regional environments. Students engage with communities in Toronto, across Canada and abroad gaining hands-on experiences of processes of urban transformations, community-based initiatives and design and policy challenges.
Students will explore these critical urban issues:
- Processes of urbanization and city life
- The regional composition of the global economy
- Planning theory and practice
- Urban and regional planning
- Urban infrastructures and mobility
- Urban health and pandemic preparedness
- Suburbanization, growth control and conservation
- Urban analytics and geomatics
- Urban wildlife and habitats
- Urban risk and resilience
- Public participation in planning and governance
- Urban inequalities, gentrification and segregation
- Urban ecologies
- Communities and urban life
This program is supported by the CITY Institute at York University, a leading interdisciplinary centre that facilitates critical and collaborative research and provides new knowledge and innovative approaches to understanding and addressing the complexity of the urban arena.

At a Glance
4 years of study
Bachelor in Environmental Studies (BES)
Offered full time and part time
Accepts applications for Fall (September), Winter (January), & Summer (May) Entry
Application Process
Hands-on Learning and Field Studies
Learning in the field is a key component in our program. Your courses will take you on location with field trips to various places in Toronto, across Ontario and in the work place.

Urban and Regional Infrastructures
In this course, students will complete a two-week intensive study of Toronto or another Canadian city on location in the field.
On location: Urban placemaking and the spatial politics of difference
In this course, students learn through immersive on-site fieldtrips and activities, walking tours, guest talks, and discussions in public spaces and community venues across the city, providing students with a first-hand experience of the struggles, controversies, and possibilities of place-making practices.


Urban Consulting Practice
In this 4th year course, students will have hands-on experience with partners in public and private urban planning practice and civil society organizations. The course will develop skill training in negotiation, consulting and community participation.
Work Placement
Course for degree credit is an option for all Cities, Regions, Planning students with private or public organization, agency or ENGOs.

Career Possibilities
With increased urbanization around the world, the need to address issues within cities including those of equity, sustainability, policy, and environment are at the forefront of many governments, businesses, and organizations.
Along with the development of practical, hands-on experiences, you will hone in-demand skills in critical thinking, communication, project management and coordination. Our graduates are working in both the public and private sector in a variety of fields including government, business, land use planning, policy, non-profit, and transportation.
To help you succeed, our Experiential Education Coordinator provides a variety of career support services to our students including resume help, interview prep, and career planning workshops, and maintains an exclusive job board just for our students.
Sample Careers
- Urban, Land Use or Transportation Planner
- Policy Advisor and Consultant
- LEED Technical Coordinator
- Transit Supervisor or Manager
- Permits and Approvals Coordinator
- Environmental Manager
- Planning and Space Assessor
Overseas Placements
Going global is optional in this program. You can choose to Study Abroad on an international Exchange program or take courses on our Semester Abroad at the Las Nubes EcoCampus in Costa Rica.
We also offer you the opportunity to complete a Global internship with York International.

The Official Cities, Regions, Planning Playlist
Have you ever wondered... which songs represent #YorkUEUC programs the best? Listen to The Official Cities, Regions, Planning Playlist 🎶
EUC Course Search Tool
The course listing provided here does not necessarily reflect courses that are being offered in any given year. Please check the York Courses Website for updated information on current offerings.
This course asks you to think critically and geographically about the world in which we live and provides context for understanding contemporary social, political, economic, and ecological changes and how you fit into these larger processes. In addition to focusing on pressing issues particular to individual regions, we stress a variety of topics including race and ethnicity, economic inequality, indigenous peoples, migration, colonialism, climate change, globalization, protest movements, food politics, conservation, and the politics of energy. The course draws upon powerful geographic concepts to examine these topics and link you-as a student, a consumer, a citizen, a worker and a traveler-to the changing world around you.
[/show_field_with_limit]The course will introduce students to how environmentalists are using documentary films for speaking truth to power. Topics will include how and why documentary films are made and the roles they play in social change efforts on environmental issues. Students will learn how to create their own digital media projects in various documentary formats.
[/show_field_with_limit]This course introduces students to historical and current ideas about land, with an emphasis on Indigenous perspectives. Through analysis of art and media art, students will engage critical approaches by scholars, activists and creatives who challenge dominant modes of power. Students will gain an understanding of treaty relations across Canada, build media analysis skills, and communication skills.
[/show_field_with_limit]Students will develop job search strategies, cover letter writing and resume development skills, effective communication skills for interviewing and developing a professional image. This course provides preparation for students who want to enrol in the co-op program. This course is for-credit and is graded on the pass/fail grading scheme. There is a $200 fee associated with this course.
Prerequisite: Students must complete 48-60 credits and meet the cumulative GPA requirements of 5.00 on the 9.00 scale or 2.00 or above on the 4.00 scale for the co-op program.
Enrollment is by permission of the Undergraduate Program Director and/or by the Course Director.
[/show_field_with_limit]In a world where over 50 per cent of the population lives in urban areas, cities play a significant role in shaping the social, cultural, economic, political, and environmental conditions of people's everyday lives. This course introduces a geographical literature on urbanization. It provides students with a necessary general survey of the characteristics of urban processes and patterns, urban systems and structure, and urban social issues from a geographical perspective.
[/show_field_with_limit]Learn more about the degree requirements in Cities, Regions, Planning
Key Contact Information
| Name | Title | Extension | Office No. | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Teresa Abbruzzese | Assistant Professor; Cities, Regions, Planning Coordinator; Urban Studies Program Coordinator | 77792 | Ross Building, S703 | euccrp@yorku.ca |
| Brittany Giglio | Recruitment & Admission Officer | 22671 | HNES 125 | eucapply@yorku.ca |
| OSAS Team | OSAS Team | 33510 | HNES 137B | EUAdvise@yorku.ca |


