This paper examines the status of geography in higher education in Hungary.
Stress is placed on reforms begun in the 1990s to launch new curricula for
training professional geographers. The authors played an important role in
developing this new curriculum by introducing new subjects into geography
programmes, working out the scope and sequence of courses, obtaining accred
itation and carrying out market research for graduates. The project was mot
ivated by a decline in demand for geography and geography teachers in secon
dary schools accompanied by an increase in demand for geographers trained t
o work in public administration, government and business. The graduates of
the new professional geographer curriculum receive a practice-oriented educ
ation designed to cultivate their spatial problem solving and applied geogr
aphical skills. In this paper the authors present the steps in the curricul
um reform and suggest that it may serve as a model for reform in a number o
f nearby countries planning to join the EU.