Leverhulme Trust
Research Project Grants
Humanities
- Award winner: Paul Allain
- Institution: University of Kent
- Value: £76,908
Physical actor training – an online A‑Z and e-book
- Award winner: Fiona Edmonds
- Institution: University of Cambridge
- Value: £139,309
Brittany and the Atlantic archipelago: contact, myth and history, 450-1200
Sciences
- Award winner: Manuel Salmeron-Sanchez
- Institution: University of Glasgow
- Value: £182,536
Living interfaces based on non-pathogenic bacteria to control stem cell differentiation
- Award winner: Bruno Linclau
- Institution: University of Southampton
- Value: £102,266
19F NMR exchange spectroscopy of polyfluorosugar transport across cell membranes
- Award winner: Charlotte Dean
- Institution: Imperial College London
- Value: £112,933
Real-time imaging of murine alveolarisation
- Award winner: Marc Buehner
- Institution: Cardiff University
- Value: £228,829
Time and causality in cognitive development
International Networks
Sciences
- Award winner: Feodor Borodich
- Institution: Cardiff University
- Value: £124,988
Nano-phenomena and functionality of modern carbon-based tribo-coatings
Humanities
- Award winner: Charles Walton
- Institution: University of Warwick
- Value: £69,910
Rights, duties and the politics of obligation: socio-economic rights in history
- Award winner: Robert Gildea
- Institution: University of Oxford
- Value: £90,886
A transnational approach to resistance in Europe, 1936-48
Arts and Humanities Research Council
Research grants
- Award winner: Andrew McRae
- Institution: University of Exeter
- Value: £72,206
The Stuart successions: fresh approaches to the understanding of 17th-century history and literature
- Award winner: Avril Maddrell
- Institution: University of the West of England
- Value: £23,900
Creating a virtual pilgrimage trail in the Isle of Man: faithscape, landscape and heritage
Fellowship
- Award winner: Robert Stern
- Institution: University of Sheffield
- Value: £196,804
The ethical demand: Løgstrup’s ethics and its implications
In detail
Award winner: Michele Aaron
Institution: University of Birmingham
Value: £38,784 Digital technology and human vulnerability: towards an ethical film praxis
This project explores how the use of digital technologies transforms engagement with, understanding of and response to vulnerability. Digital film technology has transformed the encounter between those watching and the vulnerable other. While this “ethical” encounter is the subject of discussion in film theory, researchers are yet to consider the full impact of the digital within it. Also, practitioners lack detailed ethical guidelines that move beyond basic questions of consent or good practice. The team will work with vulnerable adults – those affected by terminal illness at the John Taylor Hospice in Erdington, Birmingham – to co-create digital films. From their respective fields, the multidisciplinary team will identify, share and apply the ethical issues inherent to engaging with vulnerability through a workshop, monthly meetings, contributions to the development of an interactive website and an exhibition.