Leverhulme Trust
Research project grants
Sciences
- Award winner: Alistair Hetherington
- Institution: University of Bristol
- Value: ?63,676
UVA signalling in plants
- Award winner: Barbara Ciani
- Institution: University of Sheffield
- Value: ?163,670
Designing recyclable self-assembled fibrous biomaterials
- Award winner: María Paz Mu?oz-Herranz
- Institution: University of East Anglia
- Value: ?161,730
New transition-metal catalysed cascade cyclisations of tris(allenes)
Biotechnology and Biological Sciences Research Council
- Award winner: Christine Edwards
- Institution: University of Glasgow
- Value: ?501,797
Manipulating the activity of the gut microbiota with fermentable carbohydrates to maximise the bioavailability of bioactive phenolic acids for health
- Award winner: Sara Jabbari
- Institution: University of Birmingham
- Value: ?405,202
Maths-AIM: A mathematical and experimental approach for the rational assessment of bacterial adhesion inhibitor materials in vivo
成人VR视频
Arts and Humanities Research Council
Research grants
- Award winner: Liz Campbell
- Institution: University of Edinburgh
- Value: ?33,324
Corruption in (non-)criminal commercial enterprise: law, theory and practice
- Award winner: Anne Douglas
- Institution: Robert Gordon University
- Value: ?79,916
Cultural leadership and the place of the artist
- Award winner: David Robinson
- Institution: University of Central Lancashire
- Value: ?190,917
Unravelling the Gordian knot: integrating advanced portable technologies into the analysis of rock-art superimposition
成人VR视频
- Award winner: Alison Scott?Baumann
- Institution: Soas, University of London
- Value: ?568,727
Re/presenting Islam on campus: gender, radicalisation and interreligious understanding in British higher education
In detail
Award winner: Matthew Cook
Institution: Birkbeck, University of London
Value: ?338,326
Sexualities and Localities, c.1965-2013
This project examines the complex changes in sexual identities and communities in Leeds, Plymouth, Brighton and Manchester since the mid-1960s. In doing so, it hopes to fracture homogenising general accounts and to complicate local community research where identity categories are often a starting point. It will investigate how locality affects the understanding and experience of sexuality, thus developing an account of particular “queer” social, radical, and commercial networks. Researchers will look at how local lives and networks both mirrored and deviated from broader currents and accounts of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender life in the UK. The impact that milestones in LGBT history – including the Sexual Offences Act 1967 and the 1981 Aids crisis – had on these cities will also be considered. At a detailed, local level, the team will explore the intersection of sexual, religious, ethnic, class and gender identities and identifications. Finally, the study will investigate how patterns of local socio-economic growth/decline, gentrification, dissent/radicalism, and migration affected those who identified as gay and lesbian, and those who did not but whose sexual, social and community networks overlapped or intersected.
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