Leverhulme Trust
Research Project Grants
Sciences
- Award winner: Colin Crump
- Institution: University of Cambridge
- Value: £188,516
Developing super-resolution microscopy for the analysis of virus replication
- Award winner: James Sharp
- Institution: University of Nottingham
- Value: £66,062
Oscillations of sessile droplets
- Award winner: Stephen Matthews
- Institution: Imperial College London
- Value: £192,357
Investigating chaperone-usher pili for assembling new biosynthetic materials
- Award winner: Ferruccio Renzoni
- Institution: University College London
- Value: £149,040
Exploring stochastic thermodynamics with optical traps
Social sciences
- Award winner: Glyn Humphreys
- Institution: University of Oxford
- Value: £87,336
Group modulation of perception
- Award winner: David Ryves
- Institution: Loughborough University
- Value: £217,515
Stories of subsistence: people and coast over the past 6,000 years in the Limfjord, Denmark
National Institute for Health Research
Health Technology Assessment Programme
- Award winner: Malcolm (Calum) Semple
- Institution: University of Liverpool
- Value: £233,486
Real-time refinement and validation of criteria and tools used in primary care to aid hospital referral decisions for patients of all ages in the event of surge in an influenza pandemic
- Award winner: David Mant
- Institution: University of Oxford
- Value: £88,782
What CEA level should trigger further investigation during follow-up after curative treatment for colorectal cancer?
Action Medical Research
Research Project Grants
- Award winner: Ed Dudley
- Institution: Swansea University
- Value: £10,000
MRSA and C. difficile infections: developing new antibiotics from maggot secretions
In detail
Research Leadership Award: Humanities
Award winner: Friederike Lüpke
Institution: School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
Value: £999,631
Crossroads: investigating the unexplored side of multilingualism
This project will investigate multilingual language use in the social networks of inhabitants of three villages in the Casamance area of Senegal. In each of the villages, a different language nominally dominates; but in reality, the inhabitants of the region are all multilingual and speak between five and 10 languages in different contexts and with different interlocutors. Out of these languages, the team will focus on three - Baïnounk Gubëeher, Joola Kujirerai and Joola Eegimaa. The speakers of these small minority languages interact regularly and are often linked through kinship and marriage.
“There has been groundbreaking sociolinguistic research on multilingualism, but very little of it has focused on rural settings - multilingualism is mainly described for urban settings, often in contexts of migration and globalisation,” says Friederike Lüpke, senior lecturer in language documentation and description at Soas, University of London.
“We aim to look at multilingual practice by investigating its social and interactional character and by analysing its structural and cognitive dimensions,” she adds. “We want to understand what motivates the choice of a specific language in a given situation.”