National Institute for Health Research
Health Services and Delivery Research Programme
- Award winner: Colin Powell
- Institution: Cardiff University
- Value: £1,984,669
PUMA: Paediatric early warning system (PEWS) utilisation and mortality avoidance
- Award winner: Alicia O’Cathain
- Institution: University of Sheffield
- Value: £387,337
Understanding variation in rates of ambulance service non-conveyance of patients to an emergency department
Health Technology Assessment Programme
- Award winner: Colin Drummond
- Institution: King’s College London
- Value: £2,014,480
The effectiveness of adjunctive medication management and contingency management to enhance adherence to medications for relapse prevention in alcohol dependence
- Award winner: Alasdair James Gray
- Institution: University of Edinburgh
- Value: £2,058,508
The RAPID-CTCA trial (rapid assessment of potential Ischaemic Heart Disease with CTCA)
Public Health Research programme
- Award winner: Sharon Anne Simpson
- Institution: University of Glasgow
- Value: £430,883
Helpmedoit! A web and text-based intervention to facilitate social support to achieve and maintain health-related behaviour change
German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
Project Funding: Promoting German Studies in the UK
- Award winners: Nicholas Martin, Isabelle Hertner, Sara Jones and Julian Pänke
- Institution: University of Birmingham
- Value: £68,200 (2015 and 2016)
(Not) made in Germany? Imagining Germany from the outside
Leverhulme Trust
Research Project Grants
- Award winner: Gavin Bremner
- Institution: Lancaster University
- Value: £334,712
Auditory-visual congruence and young infants’ perception of object persistence
- Award winner: Judith Curran
- Institution: University of Liverpool
- Value: £225,287
Control of biological responses by isolated synthetic material variables
In detail
Major Research Fellowship
Award winner: Susanne Kord
Institution: University College London
Value: £138,482
The Devil we know: crime writing versus propaganda in Germany’s pre-world-war periods
“The project investigates German propaganda depicting the ‘foreign’ on one hand and, on the other, criminological and literary texts portraying the criminal, in the two decades preceding each world war. Reading criminology, crime fiction and propaganda in the context of each other shows an inverse relationship between the ‘foreign’ and the ‘homegrown’. The more dangerous and incomprehensible the enemy appeared in propaganda, the safer (lovable, sympathetic, harmless, understandable, human) the criminal appeared in criminology and fiction. Implicitly juxtaposed with the ‘foreign enemy’ or ‘foreign element’ within society (Jews in particular), the ordinary criminal became familiar, the devil one knows,” said Susanne Kord, professor of German at University College London. “The project aims to increase our understanding of mechanisms of conflict resolution and conflict avoidance. As the ‘War on Terror’ shows, distinctions between the incomprehensibly foreign and the homegrown and familiar are still with us.”
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to THE’s university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber? Login