Medical Research Council
- Award winner: Julia Sinclair
- Institution: University of Southampton
- Value: ?151,503?
Exploring the teachable moment for alcohol reduction in breast clinics: formative work to inform intervention design, development, process evaluation
- Award winner: David Mabey
- Institution: London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine
- Value: ?607,227?
Studies towards infectious disease elimination on the Bijagós archipelago of Guinea-Bissau
- Award winner: Zhengming Chen
- Institution: University of Oxford
- Value: ?604,988
Assessing health risks associated with exposure to household and ambient air pollution in rural and urban China
Royal Society
University research fellowships
These offer early career scientists, who have the potential to become leaders, an opportunity to build an independent research career?
- Award winner: Patricia Sanchez-Baracaldo
- Institution: University of Bristol
- Value: ?486,470
Transition from a freshwater to a marine biosphere during the early Earth
- Award winner: Alistair Boyer
- Institution: University of Glasgow
- Value: ?321,513
Sulfonyl triazoles: a next-generation building block for molecular complexity
- Award winner: Ricardo Monteiro
- Institution: Queen Mary University of London
- Value: ?452,148
?Geometric aspects of scattering amplitudes
Arts and Humanities Research Council
- Award winner: John Dupré
- Institution: University of Exeter
- Value: ?307,270
Representing biology as process
- Award winner: Fearghal McGarry
- Institution: Queen’s University Belfast
- Value: ?556,581
A global history of Irish Revolution, 1916-1923
- Award winner: Christina Sevdali
- Institution: Ulster University
- Value: ?193,712
Investigating variation and change: case in diachrony
In detail
Award winners: Lucy Bell (PI) and Alex Flynn
Institution: University of Surrey and Durham University
Value: ?249,910
Precarious publishing in Latin America: relations, meaning and community in movement
This project will investigate the Latin American publishing phenomenon of editoriales cartoneras (“cardboard publishers”) and how they have forged new local and global literary communities. Editoriales cartoneras are small independent publishing projects that make books out of ?recycled cardboard and sell them at reduced prices, with the aim of increasing access to literature in countries where books are expensive. Cartonera is a reference to the cartonero figure – the cardboard collector or “waste picker” – a product of the 2001 Argentine economic and unemployment crisis, which saw individuals take to the streets of Buenos Aires to collect and sell scrap materials. Editoriales cartoneras therefore might also be translated as “waste-picking publishers”. Many have subsequently recycled the idea, adapting it to different local contexts, communities and social needs. Underpinning these divergent projects is the shared notion of working productively and creatively from a situation of precariousness – material, social, political, economic and/or environmental. In this comparative study of Brazilian and Mexican cartoneras, researchers will explore “precarious publishing” in its two closely inter?related guises: an artistic trend and a social movement.