Economic and Social Research Council
Research grants
- Award winner: José López-López
- Institution: University of Bristol
- Value: £131,721
Mental health and educational achievement in UK adolescents
- Award winner: Sara Evans-Lacko
- Institution: London School of Economics
- Value: £161,418
Long-term economic impact of childhood emotional and behavioural problems
Leverhulme Trust
Research project grants
Humanities
- Award winner: Stephen Read
- Institution: University of St Andrews
- Value: £155,655
Theories of paradox in 14th-century logic: edition and translation of key texts
- Award winner: Lizzie Seal
- Institution: University of Sussex
- Value: £117,700
Race, racialisation and the death penalty in England and Wales, 1900-65
Natural Environment Research Council
- Award winner: Tom Dunkley Jones
- Institution: University of Birmingham
- Value: £483,157
Reducing greenhouse climate proxy uncertainty
Arts and Humanities Research Council
Research grants
- Award winner: Simon Rennie
- Institution: University of Exeter
- Value: £192,629
The poetry of the Lancashire cotton famine (1861-65)
- Award winner: Maggie Inchley
- Institution: Queen Mary University of London
- Value: £203,252
The verbatim formula: creative practice for young people in 21st-century UK care
- Award winner: Ana Frankenberg-Garcia
- Institution: University of Surrey
- Value: £563,356
Collocaid: combining learner needs, lexicographic data and text editors to help learners write more idiomatically
- Award winner: Aaron Williamon
- Institution: Royal College of Music
- Value: £809,096
HEARTS – the health, economic and social impact of arts engagement: a public health study
In detail
Award winner: Ellen Swift
Institution: University of Kent
Value: £305,253
Roman and Late Antique artefacts from Egypt: understanding society and culture
This project is the first in-depth investigation into Roman and Late Antique Egyptian society and culture using everyday artefacts as principal source material. By doing so, the researchers hope to expand our knowledge of social experience and relations during this period. Although UK museums possess large numbers of artefacts from Roman and Late Antique Egypt (30BC to AD700), they have often gone unstudied because of scholars’ focus on the Egyptian pharaohs. The team will concentrate on the collection at University College London’s Petrie Museum, which contains more than 8,000 objects from the period. By inspecting the artefacts’ features, the materials from which they are made, and physical evidence showing their daily use, the team will explore aspects of social behaviour and experience and shed new light on daily life in Roman and Late Antique Egypt. Use of associated texts will provide supplementary information. In particular, the researchers are interested in how experiences may have differed among people with varying status in society. Wear and repair of artefacts will also give insight into personal and sentimental attachment that owners may have had to them.