Royal Society
Wolfson Research Merit Awards
Awards are worth £10,000-£30,000 a year, which is a salary enhancement
- Award winner: Damon Teagle
- Institution: University of Southampton
The timing and duration of mid-ocean ridge flank hydrothermal chemical exchange
- Award winner: Anatoly Zayats
- Institution: King’s College London
Functional metamaterials for nanophotonics
Leverhulme Trust
Major Research Fellowships
- Award winner: Maggie B. Gale
- Institution: University of Manchester
- Value: £146,800
A social history of British performance cultures 1900-39: law, surveillance and the body
- Award winner: Sarah Coakley
- Institution: University of Cambridge
- Value: £157,954
Knowing darkly: systematic theology on the problem of sin and redemption
- Award winner: Deborah Oxley
- Institution: University of Oxford
- Value: £157,537
Weighty matters: anthropometrics, gender and health inequality in Britain’s past
- Award winner: Giovanni Capoccia
- Institution: University of Oxford
- Value: £162,154
Reshaping democracy after authoritarianism: responses to neo-fascism in Europe
Research Project Grants
Sciences
- Award winner: Maurice Elphick
- Institution: Queen Mary University of London
- Value: £119,640
Neuropeptide “cocktails”: is there a message in the mix?
- Award winner: Richard Holland
- Institution: Queen’s University Belfast
- Value: £159,214
The mystery of bird migration: testing hypotheses of true navigation
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
Research Grants
- Award winner: Saul Purton
- Institution: University College London
- Value: £2,363,928
Algal oils by design: a new biotech platform for high-value lipids
- Award winner: Javier Guitian
- Institution: Royal Veterinary College, University of London
- Value: £282,246
Combined use of novel diagnostic tools and strategic vaccination to control bovine brucellosis in endemic areas
- Award winner: Neil Perkins
- Institution: Newcastle University
- Value: £384,474
DNA damage induced phosphorylation and regulation of NF-kappaB
In detail
Economic and Social Research Council
Award winner: Laleh Khalili
Institution: Soas, University of London
Value: £633,870
Military mobilities and mobilising movements in the Middle East
This project will explore the development of cities, infrastructures, ports and transport in the Middle East and the Gulf states with the aim of producing a socio-historical account of the emergence of the technological grand projects of harbour-dredging, port-building, shipping and the accumulation of capital in transport. The role of war, trade and commerce, and struggles over citizenship and labour rights in the making of ports, transport infrastructure and shipping in the region will be explored in the project, which will also consider the part played in these ventures by migrant workers, military logistics personnel, finance and insurance brokers, and local and faraway powers. Laleh Khalili will draw on her previous research on the US military to provide a focus on mobilities, military supply chains and logistics, with the intention of mapping the interactions and partnerships between the US military, private firms and local regimes.