Grant winners – 17 September 2015

A round-up of recent recipients of research council cash

九月 17, 2015
Grant Winners header

Royal Society

Wolfson Research Merit Awards

Awards are worth £10,000-£30,000 a year, which is a salary enhancement

Quantifying plant adaptations to light environment


Revealing the nature of dark energy with cosmological probes


Leverhulme Trust

Research project grants
Sciences

Alkene-containing polymers: novel synthetic elastomers inspired by nature


Exploiting a spin-crossover module in materials chemistry and nanoscience


Hydrogen atom storage catalysts: new reaction pathways and novel synthetic transformations


The non-spherical geodynamo driven by both convection and precession


Humanities

  • Award winner: Neil Roberts
  • Institution: Plymouth University
  • Value: £298,065

Changing the face of the Mediterranean: land cover and population since the advent of farming


The medieval books of Canterbury Cathedral


Arts and Humanities Research Council

Standard Fellowship

Anarchism and eugenics: a seeming paradox (1890-1940)


Research grants

The ethics of powerlessness: the theological virtues today


  • Award winner: James Daybell
  • Institution: Plymouth University
  • Value: £36,384

Gender, politics and materiality in early modern Europe, 1500-1800


In detail

Leadership Fellowship

Award winner: Sharon Ruston
Institution: Lancaster University
Value: £238,812

A man of science and a poet: Humphry Davy’s letters, life, and legacy

This project will explore the relationship between science, society and culture, then and now, through the life and letters of one of Britain’s foremost scientists. “Between October and December 1815, Davy invented a form of miners’ safety lamp that became known as the Davy lamp. He was also the first to use the newly invented electric battery to isolate nine chemical elements, the largest number attributed to any individual,” said Sharon Ruston, professor in the department of English and creative writing. “The collected letters will provide a significant resource for Romantic-era literary scholars, proving the centrality of Davy to Romantic-period culture. [They] will tell us more about his life, his networks, and the times in which he lived, as well as about the connections and interactions that are possible between literature and science, and the ways in which science is part of culture, affected by politics, history and society.”

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