Royal Society
University Research Fellowships
- Award winner: Alis Deason
- Institution: Durham University
- Value: £448,948
Rethinking galactic architecture: clues from satellites and destroyed dwarfs
- Award winner: Christos Anastopoulos
- Institution: University of Sheffield
- Value: £412,879
Understanding the nature of electroweak symmetry breaking
- Award winner: Tom Hasell
- Institution: University of Liverpool
- Value: £471,066
Functional porous materials from inorganic waste
- Award winner: Grant Kennedy
- Institution: University of Cambridge
- Value: £422,288
Emergence and evolution of planetary systems
Leverhulme Trust
Research project grants
Sciences
- Award winner: Michalis Barkoulas
- Institution: Imperial College London
- Value: £173,412
Quantitative evolution of nematode gene regulatory networks
- Award winner: Ulrike Bechtold
- Institution: University of Essex
- Value: £229,949
Sugar signalling during drought stress; do plants suffer diabetes when stressed?
- Award winner: Ludmila Kuncheva
- Institution: Bangor University
- Value: £226,625
Prototype selection from streaming, drifting and partly labelled data using classifier ensembles
- Award winner: Karen Lander
- Institution: University of Manchester
- Value: £92,703
Investigating the role of movement in the recognition of identity from facial composites
Economic and Social Research Council/Department for International Development
ESRC-DFID Urgency Grants
- Award winner: Brad Blitz
- Institution: Middlesex University
- Value: £161,445
EVI-MED – Constructing an evidence base of contemporary Mediterranean migrations
- Award winner: Heaven Crawley
- Institution: Coventry University
- Value: £168,225
Unravelling the Mediterranean migration crisis (MEDMIG)
In detail
Economic and Social Research Council
Award winner: Sarah Roddy
Institution: University of Manchester
Value: £196,403
Visible Divinity: Money and Irish Catholicism, 1850-1921
Social science and humanities academics have long been captivated by the relationship between religious faith and economic behaviour. While this project acknowledges the work of such luminaries as Karl Marx and Viviana Zelizer, it also concerns the relationship between religious practice and economic thought, and is predicated on the idea that primary economic exchange in a religious setting has never been an intellectual one, but rather a physical one. The project suggests the process of church fundraising was/is a significant economic phenomenon, worthy of examination and conceptualisation in its own right. Also, it can tell us a great deal about the interaction of religion and economics in the lives of ordinary people. Therefore, the project’s form is an investigation of the Irish Catholic Church’s finance over a period of its increasing influence over the country’s population – the time of the Irish “devotional revolution” up to the point that the church became the dominant denomination in a newly independent country. Although predominantly historical, the research also hopes to provide insights into individual economic behaviour in ways that mainstream economics has tended to neglect.