<![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> /about/news/ en Sun, 22 Dec 2024 04:32:09 +0100 Mon, 24 Jun 2024 16:05:50 +0200 <![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg /about/news/ 144 New Future You podcast about studying humanitarianism at 91ֱ, with Dr Amanda Mccorkindale /about/news/new-future-you-podcast-about-studying-humanitarianism-at-manchester-with-dr-amanda-mccorkindale/ /about/news/new-future-you-podcast-about-studying-humanitarianism-at-manchester-with-dr-amanda-mccorkindale/637591The Humanitarian & Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) is a research and teaching centre on humanitarian response, global health, disaster management and more.

Senior Lecturer Dr Amanda McCordkindale spoke with careers guidance podcast Future You about life and study at HCRI, reflecting on the benefits and challenges of studying difficult global issues.

The latest Future You podcast delves into the history of the University’s and looks at the day-to-day life of students on our courses.

Listen to on Spotify.

In this podcast, Dr Amanda Mccorkindale describes the rationale behind HCRI’s foundation – to apply critical refection to the real-world practices of humanitarian response and improve the outcomes of those affected by natural and man-made disasters and emergencies.

Since its founding in 2008, HCRI has moved from being a strictly research-focused institute to providing a wide range of undergraduate, postgraduate and PhD courses, for those working as or aspiring to become humanitarian practitioners. This includes our unique Leadership Education Academic Partnership (LEAP) online course, which provides critical and theoretically-informed education to those working for humanitarian NGOs.

In the , Dr Mccorkindale discusses the mental health challenges of studying heavy topics, such as conflict, genocide and disasters, but also the measures HCRI takes to support its students, including trigger warnings, peer mentoring programmes, reflection on ethical positionality, and access to a wide variety of support services at University of Manchester.

The podcast also covers the wide range of career outcomes for those studying at HCRI and the multidisciplinary nature of our courses and student cohorts.

The Future You podcast is published by Prospects, an organisation that supports graduates in finding employment and educational opportunities. You can find out more information on the website.

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Mon, 24 Jun 2024 12:41:51 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e5c0c546-fbee-4b6c-b4cb-2e01023522fd/500_dramandamccorkindale.jpeg?96755 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e5c0c546-fbee-4b6c-b4cb-2e01023522fd/dramandamccorkindale.jpeg?96755
Elys Roberts Scholarship deadline extended to Friday, 28 June 2024 /about/news/elys-roberts-scholarship-deadline-extended/ /about/news/elys-roberts-scholarship-deadline-extended/634489For September 2024, a scholarship is available to help fund the first year of study in MSc Global Health by distance learning.

Scholarships for the postgraduate certificate in Global Health.

For September 2024, a scholarship is available to help fund the first year of study in MSc Global Health by distance learning.

The purpose of the scholarship is to equip those who want to make an impact in Global Health and to support international humanitarian work. 

The scholarship is available to support those pursuing a career in Global Health, from or working in low/middle-income countries who might not otherwise have the means to study for a postgraduate qualification.

Amount:

  • UK students (per annum): £4,500 p.a. (one year)
  • International, including EU, students (per annum): £9,000 p.a. (one year)

The closing date for applications is Friday, 28 June 2024 at 11.59pm (GMT). The course will commence in September 2024.

Criteria

We are looking for candidates who can demonstrate:

  • professional experience related to Global Health;
  • a clear idea of how the MSc in Global Health and studying at HCRI will benefit their career;
  • a clear passion around the subject of global health;
  • applicants are encouraged from the Global South and particularly Low- or Middle-Income Country (LMIC);
  • applicants are encouraged from the those working in LMIC contexts.

Eligibility

  • Applicants who already have a masters level qualification are ineligible to apply.
  • Students who have already accepted full scholarships or bursaries for September 2024 entry are ineligible to apply.

How to apply

To apply for the scholarship, you will need to complete the following by Friday, 28 June 2024 at 11.59pm (GMT):

Conditions of any Scholarship Award

Scholarship Award Holders have a commitment to:

  • provide blog entries throughout their study;
  • engage with requests for video testimonials if possible during their course;
  • write a testimonial at the end of their course.
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Tue, 28 May 2024 17:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/16d6cccc-80b4-4ec5-ae94-40c42ac6a1ee/500_elysrobertsscholarshipdeadlineextendedtofriday28june2024..jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/16d6cccc-80b4-4ec5-ae94-40c42ac6a1ee/elysrobertsscholarshipdeadlineextendedtofriday28june2024..jpg?10000
Professor Tony Redmond spoke to Radio 4 about ‘life changing’ early experiences in humanitarian healthcare /about/news/professor-tony-redmond-life-changing-early-experiences-in-humanitarian-healthcare/ /about/news/professor-tony-redmond-life-changing-early-experiences-in-humanitarian-healthcare/631155Co-founder of HCRI and doctor Prof Tony Redmond spoke to Radio 4 about how two events in 1988 – the Armenian earthquake and the Lockerbie bombing – changed the course of his life and the practices of emergency medical response in disaster zones.

On Wednesday, 8 May 2024, OBE spoke to Radio 4’s ‘Life Changing’ programme, describing his early years in the NHS and the extreme challenges of international and UK medical deployments in the late 1980s.

Prof Redmond is a specialist in emergency medicine and has been involved in international humanitarian assistance for almost 25 years, organising medical support to natural disasters, major incidents and complex emergencies throughout the world.

Speaking to Dr Sian Williams, he told Radio 4 that his early experiences, including leading a team of eight 91ֱ clinicians responding to a major earthquake in Armenia, led to a life-long mission to improve standards and outcomes for international medical deployments.

This work included:

  • Co-founding the 91ֱ-based charity UK-Med, a WHO-verified Emergency Medical Team supporting the UK government’s frontline health response to disasters overseas.
  • Co-founding the University’s Humanitarian & Conflict Response Institute (HCRI), which brings together scholars from the humanities and medicine to study best practice in conflict response, global health, disaster management, and peacebuilding.
  • Co-founding the Faculty of Remote, Rural and Humanitarian Healthcare at the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, incorporating the lessons of international emergency response into formal medical training.

To listen to this inspiring interview, visit the .

Prof Redmond will also be speaking on Sunday, 9 June, at an event organised by HCRI as part of the Universally 91ֱ Festival. 

  • Book your tickets on
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Wed, 08 May 2024 17:15:30 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2084e4aa-0ddc-43c2-a51f-596fc43548f8/500_professortonyredmond.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/2084e4aa-0ddc-43c2-a51f-596fc43548f8/professortonyredmond.jpeg?10000
Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) staff explore the complex history of the humanitarian sector /about/news/msf-staff-explore-complex-history-of-humanitarian-sector/ /about/news/msf-staff-explore-complex-history-of-humanitarian-sector/624905Topics included the history of slavery and anti-slavery in 91ֱ, the Partition of India, and mass violence in post-independence Zimbabwe.The University’s (HCRI) co-delivers a unique, flexible master’s course – the LEAP programme - designed for humanitarians to study alongside their work in the field.

This month, staff from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) enrolled on the programme participated in a series of online workshops and guest lectures with a focus on the historical contexts of humanitarian response. This week-long series was organised and delivered by HCRI’s , , Panagiotis Karagkounis and Niamh Hanrahan.

Guest lecturers included , who talked about her research on forced relocation in the British Empire; , who explored the politics and memory of the Gukurahundi massacres in Zimbabwe; and who presented on HCRI’s Wellcome Trust-fund project on led by .

In November 2023, the same MSF cohort visited 91ֱ and Liverpool for a series of intensive classes and networking sessions, delivered by HCRI and the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine.

By bringing together medical and humanitarian workers with social scientists, historians and global health scholars, the LEAP programme stimulates critical reflection on humanitarian work and the wider humanitarian agenda. Student testimonials can be found on the .

For more on MSF and its life-saving work, visit .

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Tue, 19 Mar 2024 16:47:51 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c4981b48-6b8c-4f10-bd88-396c1d813565/500_leaplogo2.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c4981b48-6b8c-4f10-bd88-396c1d813565/leaplogo2.jpeg?10000
Applications are now open for funding to study Global Health (PGCert) /about/news/applications-are-now-open-for-funding-to-study-global-health-pgcert/ /about/news/applications-are-now-open-for-funding-to-study-global-health-pgcert/622950

Scholarships for the postgraduate certificate in Global Health (PGCert).

For September 2024, a scholarship is available to help fund the first year of study in MSc Global Health by distance learning, where you can exit with a Postgraduate Certificate, potentially leading to a Postgraduate Diploma or Masters in Global Health.

The purpose of the scholarship is to equip those who want to make an impact on Global Health and to support international humanitarian work. 

The scholarship is available to support those pursuing a career in Global Health, from or working in low/middle-income countries who might not otherwise have the means to study for a postgraduate qualification.
 

Fees:

  • UK students (per annum): £4,500 p.a. (one year)
  • International, including EU, students (per annum): £9,000 p.a. (one year)
     

Entry Criteria

We are looking for candidates who can demonstrate:

  • professional experience related to Global Health;
  • a clear idea of how the MSc in Global Health and studying at HCRI will benefit their career;
  • a clear passion around the subject of global health;
  • applicants are encouraged from the Global South and particularly Low- or Middle-Income Country (LMIC);
  • applicants are encouraged from the those working in LMIC contexts.
     

Eligibility

  • Applicants who already have a masters level qualification are ineligible to apply.
  • Students who have already accepted full scholarships or bursaries for September 2024 entry are ineligible to apply.
     

Conditions of any PGCert Scholarship Award

Scholarship Award Holders have a commitment to:

  • provide blog entries throughout their study;
  • engage with requests for video testimonials if possible during their course;
  • write a testimonial at the end of their course.
     

How to apply

To apply for the scholarship, you will need to complete the following by Friday, 24 May 2024 11.59 pm (GMT):

  • submit the University of Manchester postgraduate admissions form, providing all necessary supporting material (including transcript and two references); and
  • submit a 500-word case for support of how you meet the bursary criteria by email to hcri@manchester.ac.uk. Please include your full name and application ID number.
     

The closing date for applications is Friday, 24 May 2024 11.59 pm (GMT)

The course will commence in September 2024.
 

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Tue, 05 Mar 2024 21:02:31 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bebee318-5567-42a8-87e6-66770cb37629/500_applicationsarenowopenforfundingtostudyglobalhealthpgcert..jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bebee318-5567-42a8-87e6-66770cb37629/applicationsarenowopenforfundingtostudyglobalhealthpgcert..jpg?10000
HCRI students visit India for the annual TISS-HCRI Winter School /about/news/hcri-students-visit-india-for-the-annual-tiss-hcri-winter-school/ /about/news/hcri-students-visit-india-for-the-annual-tiss-hcri-winter-school/620121Undergraduates studying disaster management and humanitarian response spent 12 days on a research and educational visit to Mumbai, hosted by the Tata Institute for Social Sciences (TISS).

In January, students at the Humanitarian & Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) flew to Mumbai and took part in various educational sessions, field visits and walking tours. 

The meticulously planned 12-day schedule also had space for the participants to wind down and enjoy their trip.

Hosted by HCRI’s partners at TISS, a multi-campus public university in Mumbai, the Winter School included visits to:

  • The mangroves in Airoli, to watch flamingos and understand the delicate ecosystems crisscrossing Mumbai.
  • The M-Ward area to understand the role of policy advocacy about migration, vulnerability and disaster risk reduction.
  • The 26/11 Mumbai Attacks sites to gain perspective on violence and conflict in the region.
     

Speaking about the Winter School, student Lizzie Beach said:
 

The HCRI-TISS Winter School was organised as part of the undergraduate module Practical Approaches to Researching Disasters and Conflict.

For more information about the HCRI’s courses, visit our .

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Wed, 07 Feb 2024 16:48:35 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5281bb76-538a-42da-983f-138a5c3e8df5/500_pic1-mumbai.jpeg?29472 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5281bb76-538a-42da-983f-138a5c3e8df5/pic1-mumbai.jpeg?29472
Call for Papers: HCRI Workshop on ‘The Multiple Transformations of Archives, 1920s to 2010s’ /about/news/call-for-papers-hcri-workshop-on-the-multiple-transformations-of-archives-1920s-to-2010s/ /about/news/call-for-papers-hcri-workshop-on-the-multiple-transformations-of-archives-1920s-to-2010s/614883HCRI is welcoming papers for a two-day workshop which will consider the multiple transformations of archives from the 1920s to the 2010s.

The hybrid, cross-disciplinary event is on Wednesday 13 – Thursday 14 March 2024, with the deadline for proposals being Friday, 19 January 2024.

The workshop is for PhD candidates and early career scholars.

Throughout the last quarter of the twentieth century, many scholars have shed light on the puzzling concept of the ‘Archive’, expanding its horizons from a side-lined feature of historiography to a deeply philosophical and political matter.

This two-day workshop, held at the John Rylands Research Institute and Library, calls for a continued and cross discipline engagement with archives, and their sources. It aims to bring together PhD and Early Career Researchers in both history and social sciences, to engage in meaningful discussions on the ways in which archives have been constructed, maintained, and transformed in the 20th century.
 

The workshop has three themes at the centre of its approach (but remains open to related topics):
 

  1. Archival power structures

    Who has the authority to determine the ‘good archival’ practices and methods (historians, archivists, or policymakers and the state)? How do these developments shape power relations between state and citizens? How do you create an archive? How do you end one? Who decides this?
     
  2. Humanitarianism, migration studies and the archive

    What approaches are necessary to consider records surrounding people in transit? How can we bring together both the theoretical concerns of the ‘archival turn’ and methodological insights of the ‘global turn’? How do we consider - and can we connect - vastly different archive constructions: from highly bureaucratic institutions such as the Red Cross, to local organisations like the Huddersfield Famine Relief Committee, to collections created and curated on the move by individual refugees?
     
  3. Archives and the digital era

    What does an increase in the belief in ‘fake news’, and in the use of artificial intelligence mean for online archives attempting to claim truth? What does the digitisation of archival material and the digitisation of bureaucratic services mean for the future of historiography? What kind of epistemological concerns does digitisation reveal (or: Is truth still relevant in a post-truth era of politics)? What kind of archives will be produced in the future?


Abstracts and format

To allow for a wide range of researchers to take part in this discussion, the workshop will take place in a hybrid format, in 91ֱ and online. Please indicate whether you would like to speak in person or online in your application. We have a small number of travel and accommodation bursaries available for participants to attend in person.

Please send an abstract of 300 words to archivaltransformations@gmail.com by 5pm UK time on Friday, 19 January 2024.

Please also include your name, a short biography (max. 100 words), the title of your paper, and your contact details. The outcome will be announced by Monday, 5 February 2024. Short pre-circulated papers will be due two weeks before the workshop.
 

Workshop organisers:

  • Niamh Hanrahan (PhD candidate, Humanitarianism and Conflict Response, University of Manchester)
  • Panagiotis Karagkounis (PhD candidate, Humanitarianism and Conflict Response, University of Manchester)
  • Flora Chatt (Archivist, Humanitarian Archive at John Rylands Research Institute and Library)

The workshop is sponsored by the John Rylands Research Event Grant.

Event partners are: School of Arts, Languages and Cultures; The Centre for Interdisciplinary Research in the Arts and Languages; Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute - all at the University of Manchester.

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Tue, 19 Dec 2023 17:06:15 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a74e2a45-103f-43d6-bf9d-c4847012dac4/500_workshoprylandsphoto.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a74e2a45-103f-43d6-bf9d-c4847012dac4/workshoprylandsphoto.jpg?10000
HCRI’s work celebrated at Global 91ֱ event /about/news/hcris-work-celebrated-at-global-manchester-event/ /about/news/hcris-work-celebrated-at-global-manchester-event/595455On 2 October 2023, HCRI attended the ‘Global 91ֱ’ reception highlighting the work of 7 91ֱ-based humanitarian organisations to collectively achieve major global impact.

Humanitarian organisations in our region benefited the lives of 7 million people in 58 countries last year, it was revealed at an event this week.

The Global 91ֱ reception at HOME 91ֱ saw the university’s Humanitarian & Conflict Response Institute (HCRI), UK-Med, Action for Humanity, Hope for Justice, In Place of War, and the Omega Research Foundation showcase their work to MPs, councillors, media, consuls, and NGO partners. 

It was hosted by the international landmine clearance charity, Mines Advisory Group, also headquartered in 91ֱ.

The keynote address was given by Sir Graham Brady (MP for Altrincham and Sale West), who noted the diversity and outsized impact of international charities based in our city and region.

HCRI was represented by its Executive Director, Professor Larissa Fast.

To find out more about HCRI’s global and local partnerships with humanitarian aid and disaster relief organisations, visit the .

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Fri, 06 Oct 2023 12:30:34 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eed33152-d741-45fb-8334-f64d9133ba24/500_1.paulatherton-ceos.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eed33152-d741-45fb-8334-f64d9133ba24/1.paulatherton-ceos.jpeg?10000
UK-Med's Emergency Medical Team deploys to Morocco after earthquake /about/news/emt-deploys-to-morocco-after-earthquake/ /about/news/emt-deploys-to-morocco-after-earthquake/590410UK-Med, the UK’s official Emergency Medical Team based at The University of Manchester, has deployed a specialist team of humanitarian workers to Morocco following the recent earthquake.

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UK-Med, the UK’s official Emergency Medical Team based at The University of Manchester, has deployed a specialist team of humanitarian workers to Morocco following the recent earthquake.

The team of five humanitarian workers is made up of specialists in responding to large-scale humanitarian emergencies, and it includes a medical lead, a paramedic, a water and sanitation engineer, a logistics expert and a team leader.

On arrival they will immediately conduct a rapid assessment to evaluate the most pressing humanitarian health needs; and evaluate the extent of damage to essential healthcare infrastructure. The team will be aware that the current local capacity of the health system may not be able to cope with and absorb the large numbers of wounded and sick.

Tom Godfrey leads the UK-Med team in Morocco. Tom has more than fifteen years of humanitarian leadership experience spanning Africa, Asia, and the Middle East.

He says, “It’s rare for north Africa to be struck by earthquakes. Sadly, that means many of the buildings high in the Atlas Mountains where the disaster occurred won’t have been able to withstand the quake.

“More than 2,000 people are known to have died, and sadly the death toll is expected to rise. We know from experience in previous earthquake responses such as February’s Turkey/Syria that many more people could be trapped under fallen masonry.  We also know that earthquakes can destroy or overwhelm pre-existing health infrastructure, which hampers timely access to health services for survivors. Injuries and trauma of varying degrees, as well as soft tissue infections are the major initial concerns expected during the first few days after an earthquake.

“Additionally, water and foodborne diseases, respiratory and close contact infections can all be anticipated to increase over the coming weeks and months after an earthquake of this scale. That’s why identifying areas where medical services are deficient is important to ensure the most appropriate medical care is provided to prevent these types of illnesses from spreading."

UK-Med is the only UK based emergency medical team (EMT) to be approved by the World Health Organization. It is also the only UK based medical charity to partner as an EMT with the UK government during overseas humanitarian disaster. If requested, UK-Med can quickly deploy a full field hospital in support of a WHO or UK government response to the quake in Morocco.

“For now, its vital important that we conduct a rapid assessment of the humanitarian health needs to determine how best we can support the people impacted by this devastating earthquake,” adds Mr Godfrey.

UK-Med launch Morocco emergency appeal

To support UK-Med’s work in Morocco, public donations are encouraged at 

Tom Godfrey says, “Please give generously to support our appeal.  We rely on the support of the public to fund our life-saving work.  It costs hundreds of thousands of pounds to deploy a full field hospital with dozens of specialist NHS staff. We’re a small nimble medical aid charity, and your donation will help us to save lives.”

UK-Med has more than thirty years’ experience responding to humanitarian emergencies, including the war in Ukraine and the earthquake in Turkey and Syria, by providing rapid medical care for affected communities.

With a roster of nearly 1,000 NHS and international doctors, nurses, paramedics, logisticians and other allied non-health professionals who are highly skilled in emergency work, UK-Med provides an on-call system for global health relief.

In the last year alone, UK-Med has deployed more than 400 personnel, provided treatment for 35,000 patients around the world, and has trained 11,000 local medical staff.

For interviews contact Ian Woolverton, Media Manager, on +44 (0) 7377 547362. For other inquiries, email comms@uk-med.org or call 0161 275 7873. Follow UK-Med on social media for the latest updates (, and ).

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Tue, 12 Sep 2023 15:12:20 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f18e5711-2452-41dc-930a-4028118aa33d/500_ukmedmorocco.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f18e5711-2452-41dc-930a-4028118aa33d/ukmedmorocco.jpg?10000
Call for Papers: HCRI Conference on ‘Navigating Crossroads: Advancements and Challenges in Medical Humanitarianism and Global Health’ /about/news/call-for-papers-hcri-conference-on-navigating-crossroads-advancements-and-challenges-in-medical-humanitarianism-and-global-health/ /about/news/call-for-papers-hcri-conference-on-navigating-crossroads-advancements-and-challenges-in-medical-humanitarianism-and-global-health/578512HCRI welcomes papers for a one-day conference on the themes of: Humanitarian Healthcare and Technical Innovation; Strengthening Global Healthcare Systems; and Ethical Decision Making on Humanitarian Health and Refugee Health.The Humanitarian & Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) is inviting papers for a conference titled Navigating Crossroads: Advancements and Challenges in Medical Humanitarianism and Global Health, to be held at University of Manchester in September. 

We invite academics, practitioners, policymakers, and research students to submit papers for presentation and discussion.

This one-day conference aims to explore the crossroads in the fields of medical humanitarianism and global health, highlighting the critical issues and emerging trends that shape the present and future of healthcare delivery in humanitarian and global settings. It will also mark the start of our on Historicising Humanitarian Medicine.

Submissions of 250-word abstracts on original research papers and case studies are welcome under the following thematic areas:

1. Humanitarian Healthcare and Technical Innovation:

  • The role of digital health technologies in humanitarian settings
  • Innovations in medical devices and equipment for humanitarian response
  • Data-driven approaches to improving healthcare outcomes in humanitarian settings

2. Strengthening Global Healthcare Systems:

  • Health system strengthening in low- and middle-income countries
  • Capacity building and workforce development in global health
  • Innovative models of healthcare delivery in underserved or disaster-prone populations
  • Addressing health inequities and social determinants of health on a global scale
  • Mental health and psychosocial support in humanitarian emergencies

3. Ethical Decision Making in Humanitarian Healthcare and Refugee Health:

  • Ethical dilemmas and challenges in healthcare provision during humanitarian crises
  • Protection of vulnerable populations and the rights of refugees
  • Ethical considerations in conducting research in humanitarian health contexts
  • Intersectionality and equity in healthcare decision-making

Timeline:

  • Abstract Submission Deadline: Friday, 21 July 2023
  • Notification of Acceptance: Friday, 28 July 2023
  • Registration (£30 academic/£20 PGR or those on precarious contracts). Deadline: Friday, 1 September 2023
  • Conference Date: Monday, 11 September (all day), University of Manchester

Join us at Navigating Crossroads to engage in stimulating discussions, share innovative research findings, and foster collaboration in an interdisciplinary setting.

For submissions or enquiries, please contact the conference organising committee via hcri@manchester.ac.uk.

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Fri, 23 Jun 2023 16:16:15 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_iron_bird_13.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/iron_bird_13.jpg?10000
HCRI PhD Candidate wins MDC Excellence Award for Internationalisation /about/news/hcri-phd-candidate-wins-mdc-excellence-award-for-internationalisation/ /about/news/hcri-phd-candidate-wins-mdc-excellence-award-for-internationalisation/578506Congratulations to HCRI’s Dr Rohi Jehan for winning a 2023 91ֱ Doctoral College (MDC) Excellence Award for ‘contributions to internationalisation’.

The winners of the MDC Excellence Awards 2023 were announced in June. These awards are given in recognition of the outstanding achievements of postgraduate researchers and supervisors.

The awards invite supervisors, PGR students and colleagues from all faculties to nominate individuals based on excellence in their research or their successes and contributions outside of their studies.

HCRI PhD Candidate Rohi Jehan won one of the awards for ‘Best Contribution to Internationalisation’.

The MDC noted:
 

This is the tenth year of the awards, recognising contributions to research, the University and the wider community.

For more information about the MDC awards, check out the .

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Fri, 23 Jun 2023 15:23:45 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c4786fb0-e5f6-4965-b227-b197e96e552e/500_rohijehan.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c4786fb0-e5f6-4965-b227-b197e96e552e/rohijehan.jpeg?10000
HCRI Professor to commence ambitious five-year project on the history of humanitarian medicine /about/news/hcri-professor-to-commence-ambitious-five-year-project-on-the-history-of-humanitarian-medicine/ /about/news/hcri-professor-to-commence-ambitious-five-year-project-on-the-history-of-humanitarian-medicine/574486From September 2023, Prof. Bertrand Taithe will lead a group of researchers based at UoM’s Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) on a new research project on the history of humanitarian medicine as a set of emergency interventions.

The project seeks to generate significant shifts in understanding its scientific and organisational specificity and role in developing clinical norms, debating ‘rights-based’ approach to health access and leading campaigns for access to drugs while deploying bespoke biotechnological tools.

This history will inform humanitarian practice and contribute to ongoing debates on how humanitarian medical providers engage with pharmaceutical and biotech industries to disseminate, repurpose, and research drugs and diagnostic tools. 

The project will develop four work packages building up from patient-centred clinical norms and concerns on care to experimental initiatives in humanitarian setting and state-led norm-setting diplomacy through emergency medical teams (EMTs) initiatives.

The project will place historical records, their use and preservation, at the heart of humanitarian practices and transform the way that researchers and practitioners deploy evidence from the very recent past. The project will draw from archives (existing NGO archives, public records, personal papers collected in the Humanitarian Archive at the University of Manchester John Rylands Research Institute and Library) and will create new archives through oral history and project field work.

The project is titled ‘Developing Humanitarian Medicine: from Alma Ata to Bio-Tech, a history of norms, knowledge production and care (1978-2020)’ and will have a duration of of five years.

A full project website will be launched soon and links to job adverts for associated research and archival posts will be posted here. The project is funded by the Wellcome Trust ().

Project Team/Contact:

For more information, visit the .

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Fri, 19 May 2023 14:43:37 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d137a5fb-aa75-4dd8-b14a-d64cf4acb9dd/500_developinghumanitarianmedicine.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d137a5fb-aa75-4dd8-b14a-d64cf4acb9dd/developinghumanitarianmedicine.jpg?10000
Founder of Manchester medical aid charity to deliver annual lecture /about/news/founder-of-manchester-medical-aid-charity-to-deliver-annual-lecture/ /about/news/founder-of-manchester-medical-aid-charity-to-deliver-annual-lecture/573728The founder of a frontline medical aid charity based at The University of Manchester who spent 35 years responding to wars and major disasters around the world is to deliver this year’s Cockcroft Rutherford Lecture on Tuesday 16 May.

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The founder of a frontline medical aid charity based at The University of Manchester who spent 35 years responding to wars and major disasters around the world is to deliver this year’s Cockcroft Rutherford Lecture on Tuesday 16 May.

The Cockcroft Rutherford Lecture is the flagship annual event for alumni and friends of The University of Manchester, which has the largest global alumni community of any-campus based university in the UK and has graduates in over 190 countries.

Previous Cockcroft Rutherford lecturers include former Chief Medical Officer for England Professor Dame Sally Davies, Head of News & Current Affairs at Channel 4 Television Dorothy Byrne, former Greater 91ֱ Chief Constable Professor Sir Peter Fahy and astrophysicist and TV presenter Professor Brian Cox OBE.

This year’s lecture will be given by Professor Tony Redmond OBE, who recently stood down as Chair of UK-Med after 29 years in the role. Tony, who originally studied medicine at The University of Manchester, founded the organisation in 1994 which subsequently became one of the world’s leading disaster response charities.

From an initial register of 100 volunteer clinicians, the charity - which is based in the University’s Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) now has more than 1,000 highly-trained doctors, nurses, paramedics and allied health professionals on its books, aided by a central team of over 40. It has responded to emergencies in 21 countries over the past two years including Ukraine, Lebanon, Myanmar and Yemen. 

In his talk, he will reflect upon the years he spent responding to wars and major disasters and the lessons the world has – and has not – learnt.

The University of Manchester’s President and Vice Chancellor Professor Dame Nancy Rothwell will chair the lecture, which will be followed by an audience Q&A.

“We’re very excited to welcome hundreds of our alumni on to campus for the lecture, especially our community of generous volunteers and donors who all help 91ֱ make things happen,” said Richard Screaton, Deputy Director (Alumni Engagement) at The University of Manchester. “We know that hundreds more graduates around the globe will be joining us online to watch the lecture.”

The lecture can be streamed live on from 6pm on Tuesday 16 May, where it will also be available afterwards for those unable to watch it live.

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Fri, 12 May 2023 10:59:29 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_tonyredmond.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/tonyredmond.jpg?10000
91ֱ student looks to provide relief in Malawi after cyclone hits country /about/news/manchester-student-looks-to-provide-relief/ /about/news/manchester-student-looks-to-provide-relief/565007A student from The University of Manchester is looking to provide relief for people in Malawi, by raising money for two charities working to deliver aid to those in need after a cyclone hit the country.

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A student from The University of Manchester is looking to provide relief for people in Malawi, by raising money for two charities working to deliver aid to those in need after a cyclone hit the country.

Lizzie Beach is an International Disaster Management and Humanitarian Response student, and has been on a placement year in Malawi since last September living and working in a home for vulnerable children. She supports them with their emotional and social development, tutors them for their academic studies and helps to improve their spoken and written English, as well as teaching in a nearby primary school. 

She is doing her placement though Project Trust, a UK-based charity which works in partnership with organisations in Africa, Latin America and Asia. Its volunteers take part in long-term placements alongside local teams to support education, youth development and social care initiatives

She was at the childrens’ home when Cyclone Freddy hit – luckily the house remained standing and the children were all safe, although the roof developed some major leaks and the garden partially flooded. 

However, the cyclone caused devastation across her local district of Blantyre and the entire south of Malawi - latest reports are saying that more than 225 people have died in the country, and more than 88000 people have been displaced.

The dire situation means people have lost their homes and family members, and many have gone for several days without food. To make matters worse, heavy rains are expected to continue and will likely cause more flooding in the coming days.

With no access to a car or other significant resources, Lizzie is trying to help in any way that she can by raising awareness and money for two charities working on the ground. Road to Relief, who she works personally with, are providing emergency kits which include maize flour, salt, soya, soap, tea, sugar, rice, plastic sheeting, a bucket, water guard and a blanket. The kits cost the equivalent of £27, and they are vital to help the people who have been displaced. 

Another charity, Round Table Malawi, is also working hard to provide emergency aid and support. Both charities will have a direct positive impact on the lives of those who are suffering, but they both need urgent funds to deal with the sheer number of people requiring aid.

“During my degree, I consume so many news and academic articles about disasters across the world - while these are often difficult to read, experiencing such a disaster in real life is completely different,” said Lizzie. “My desire and drive to help in the response comes from my personal passion for humanitarian aid, and I also personally know a number of people whose homes were destroyed by the storm.”

To donate to Road to Relief, visit . You can also donate via bank transfer to Memon Association UK (sort code 30-98-97, account number 67538462). 

To donate to Round Table Malawi, visit .

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Thu, 16 Mar 2023 16:20:53 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f6aa774b-49a6-4eac-a97d-e4bb103c48d0/500_lizzie1.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/f6aa774b-49a6-4eac-a97d-e4bb103c48d0/lizzie1.jpg?10000
New book offers insights into climate emergency and human mobility /about/news/insights-into-climate-emergency-and-human-mobility/ /about/news/insights-into-climate-emergency-and-human-mobility/547339As the global community meets in Egypt for the COP27 climate conference an expert from The University of Manchester has released a new book which explores the links between human mobility and severe weather.

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As the global community meets in Egypt for the COP27 climate conference, an expert from The University of Manchester has released a new book which explores the links between human mobility and severe weather.

Dr. Stephanie Sodero is a Lecturer in Climate Change and Health at the University's . In Under the Weather: Reimagining Mobility in the Climate Crisis,  she examines how driving, flying and shipping impact the climate - and in turn, how severe weather disrupts human society.

Humans and human mobility are entangled with the climate emergency. Fossil-fuelled mobility worsens severe weather, and in turn, severe weather disrupts human mobility. Stephanie says that a shift to zero-emission vehicles is critical, but is insufficient to repair the damage or prepare communities for the coming disruptions that severe weather will bring. 

In her book, Stephanie examines two Atlantic Canadian hurricane case studies - Hurricane Juan in Mi'kma'ki in her home province of Nova Scotia in 2003, and Hurricane Igor in Newfoundland in 2010. 

It contributes to contemporary cultural and policy discussions by offering five practical recommendations - revolutionise mobility, prioritise vital mobility of medical goods and services, embrace ecological mobilities, rebrand redundancy, and think flexibly - for how mobility can be reimagined to work with, rather than against, the climate in ways that also benefit the health, education, and economy of local communities. 

This ecological approach to mobilities sheds light on extreme mobility dependency and the impact of mobility disruptions on the ground in Canadian communities. 

Focusing on the entangled relationship between human mobility and the climate, Under the Weather examines how communities can transform their relationship with mobility to enable greater resilience.

Dr. Sodero recalls the book’s beginnings: "I started this book a long time ago when a record-breaking hurricane hit home. While writing was a long road, the book and its ideas are only increasing in relevance as communities near and far are confronted with climate impacts not just on their doorsteps – but inside their houses." 

The book calls for a revolutionary approach to mobility and Dr. Sodero develops innovative recommendations such as prioritising medical movements, embracing ecological mobilities, and rebranding redundancy. 

Dr Sodero's book is available from November 15 from outlets including and . 

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Mon, 14 Nov 2022 11:50:39 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_underweather.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/underweather.jpg?10000
New book confronts the intersection between mobility and the climate crisis /about/news/new-book-confronts-the-intersection-between-mobility-and-the-climate-crisis/ /about/news/new-book-confronts-the-intersection-between-mobility-and-the-climate-crisis/545299

A new book by Stephanie Sodero of the HCRI explores the intersection between fossil fuel-powered mobility and climate change and how communities and mobility need to be revolutionised in Sodero’s homeland of Canada and beyond  in the context of climate change. 

 by the Lecturer in Climate Change and Health is published by McGill-Queen’s University Press and comes out on 15 November 2022.

"My home was hit by Hurricane Fiona just a few weeks ago, causing much disruption and devastation,” said Sodero. “I hope the book will shape conversations about climate action and community resilience on the ground with policy makers, transport managers, climate advocates, and many more.

“While writing was a long road, the book and its ideas are only increasing in relevance as communities near and far are confronted with climate impacts on their doorsteps."

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Thu, 03 Nov 2022 11:39:02 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_undertheweatherstephaniesodero.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/undertheweatherstephaniesodero.jpg?10000
Multimorbidity research project secures funding /about/news/multimorbidity-research-project-secures-funding/ /about/news/multimorbidity-research-project-secures-funding/543922HCRI and partner organisations secure funding for new research collaboration to identify multimorbidity in sub-Saharan African hospitals.The at University of Manchester in collaboration with (LSTM) and five partner organisations have secured funding from to design and test a system that identifies patients suffering from multiple chronic diseases (multimorbidity) when they seek emergency care in sub-Saharan African hospitals.

, administered through LSTM, aims to research ways to identify multimorbidity (such as high blood pressure, diabetes and HIV) by improving diagnostic tests in emergency departments in hospitals in Malawi and Tanzania. The overall aim is to improve early disease treatment, ensure better follow up (prevent complications, disability and hospital readmission), thus improving health related quality of life and survival rates.

As part of this programme of work, the Multilink consortium have funded four multidisciplinary PhDs, who will lead the main research areas in the disciplines of clinical medicine; health economics; health systems; and social science. Multilink co-investigator , from the University of Manchester through HCRI, is providing project expertise and PhD co-supervision in rapid diagnosis in emergency care and advising on evidence and policy for resilient health systems.

Through collaborative partnerships in Malawi and Tanzania, the team will define how multimorbidity differs from high-income countries so that the intervention is locally relevant, and then test it in a clinical trial across both countries. The leadership team includes Charity Salima, a community group leader in Malawi, ensuring that patients’ voices are driving the research agenda.

After mapping how the health system works, they will work with policymakers and patients to find the most efficient and preferred approach to testing and clinical management pathways.

This research was funded by the NIHR (project reference NIHR201708) using UK aid from the UK Government to support global health research. The views expressed in this publication are those of the author(s) and not necessarily those of the NIHR or the UK government.

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Tue, 01 Nov 2022 21:37:18 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_picturedabovedrfelixlimbanianddrstephenspencervisittokilimanjarochristianmedicalcentreintanzaniameetingwithdrmattrubachandsomeoftheteamworkingonthenihrfundedmutlilinkmultimorbidityproject..jpg?26643 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/picturedabovedrfelixlimbanianddrstephenspencervisittokilimanjarochristianmedicalcentreintanzaniameetingwithdrmattrubachandsomeoftheteamworkingonthenihrfundedmutlilinkmultimorbidityproject..jpg?26643
Elys Roberts Scholarship deadline extended to 31st August 2022 /about/news/elys-roberts-scholarship-deadline-extended-to-31st-august-2022/ /about/news/elys-roberts-scholarship-deadline-extended-to-31st-august-2022/525080Deadlines for applications for the Elys Roberts Scholarship to study Global Health MSc/PGDip/PGCert has been extended to Wednesday, 31 August. is available to support talented applicants from or working in low/middle-income countries and HCRI is looking for candidates who can demonstrate:

  • Professional experience related to Global Health
  • A clear idea of how the MSc in Global Health and studying at HCRI will benefit their career
  • A clear passion around the subject of global health
  • Conditions of the scholarship include the providing blog entries throughout their study and writing a testimonial at the end of their course.

Applicants may be of any nationality, and will need to complete their application by the closing date of Wednesday, 31 August 2022 11.59pm (BST):

  • Submit the University of Manchester postgraduate admissions form, providing all necessary supporting material (including transcript and two references); and
  • Submit a 500-word case for support of how you meet the bursary criteria by email to hcri@manchester.ac.uk. Please include your full name and application ID number.
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Mon, 22 Aug 2022 14:05:48 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_iron_bird_13.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/iron_bird_13.jpg?10000
Elys Roberts Scholarship deadline 29th July 2022 /about/news/elys-roberts-scholarship-deadline-29th-july-2022/ /about/news/elys-roberts-scholarship-deadline-29th-july-2022/520455Applications are  open for funding to study Global Health (MSc).  

 is available to support talented applicants from or working in low/middle-income countries and HCRI is looking for candidates who can demonstrate:

·       Professional experience related to Global Health

·       A clear idea of how the MSc in Global Health and studying at HCRI will benefit their career

·       A clear passion around the subject of global health

·       Conditions of the scholarship include the providing blog entries throughout their study and writing a testimonial at the end of their course.

Applicants may be of any nationality, and will need to complete their application by the closing date of Friday 29 July 2022 11.59pm (BST):

·       Submit the University of Manchester postgraduate admissions form, providing all necessary supporting material (including transcript and two references); and

·       Submit a 500-word case for support of how you meet the bursary criteria by email to hcri@manchester.ac.uk. Please include your full name and application ID number.

 

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Mon, 18 Jul 2022 11:16:42 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_sam-alex-774x300-786957.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/sam-alex-774x300-786957.jpg?10000
Winners of HCRI ‘Words For Your World’ school writing competition announced /about/news/winners-of-hcri-words-for-your-world/ /about/news/winners-of-hcri-words-for-your-world/515597The Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute has announced the winners, runners up and commended entries of their , in partnership with and .

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The Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute has announced the winners, runners up and commended entries of their , in partnership with and .

The competition asked secondary students from years 9-13 across the UK to write a letter or speech addressed to the UN, on the climate emergency. 

HCRI received over 100 entries, judged by from Save the Children UK, HCRI’s own Lecturer in Responses to Climate Crises, and Sophie Grattidge from UK-Med.

School students were also offered the opportunity to be part of the competition’s creative writing workshops led by Chad Campbell who  is the author of two collections of poetry, Laws & Locks (Signal, 2015) and Nectarine (Signal, 2021). He is one of the poetry editors at The 91ֱ Review and teaches creative writing at The University of Manchester's Centre for New Writing.

A prize giving event will be held on the 15 July for the winning entries and guests on the university campus, which will celebrate their hard work. 

The winning entries will also be displayed at as part of the HCRI stall in partnership with UK-Med, alongside the graphic novella called about disasters both caused and made worse by the climate emergency.

You can

HCRI is a leading global centre for the study of humanitarianism and conflict response, global health, international disaster management and peacebuilding.

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Fri, 24 Jun 2022 15:55:14 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_expression-g6bd448c1c-1920-2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/expression-g6bd448c1c-1920-2.jpg?10000
HCRI ‘Words For Your World’ National Writing School Competition Winners Announced /about/news/hcri-words-for-your-world-national-writing-school-competition-winners-announced/ /about/news/hcri-words-for-your-world-national-writing-school-competition-winners-announced/515507

The Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute has announced the winners, runners up and commended entries of their , in partnership with and .

The competition asked secondary students from years 9-13 across the UK to write a letter or speech addressed to the UN, on the climate emergency. HCRI received over 100 entries, judged by from Save the Children UK, HCRI’s own Lecturer in Responses to Climate Crises, and Sophie Grattidge from UK-Med.

School students were also offered the opportunity to be part of the competition’s creative writing workshops led by Chad Campbell who  is the author of two collections of poetry, Laws & Locks (Signal, 2015) and Nectarine (Signal, 2021). He is one of the poetry editors at The 91ֱ Review and teaches creative writing at the University of Manchester's Centre for New Writing.

A prize-giving event will be held on the 15 July for the winning entries and guests on the university campus, which will celebrate their hard work. The winning entries will also be displayed at as part of the HCRI stall in partnership with UK-Med, alongside the graphic novella called about disasters both caused and made worse by the climate emergency.

You can

is a leading global centre for the study of humanitarianism and conflict response, global health, international disaster management and peacebuilding.

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Thu, 23 Jun 2022 17:08:56 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_expression-g6bd448c1c-1920.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/expression-g6bd448c1c-1920.jpg?10000
Words For Your World: HCRI School Writing Competition Winners Announced Soon with Special July Event /about/news/words-for-your-world-hcri-school-writing-competition-winners-announced-soon-with-special-july-event/ /about/news/words-for-your-world-hcri-school-writing-competition-winners-announced-soon-with-special-july-event/506746

The deadline to enter the ’s “Words For Your World” school writing competition is now closed and winners will be notified by the 27th May. The competition received over 100 entries, from across the country, and will culminate in an event on 15th of July for the winners, runners up and commended entries.

The competition asked school students from years 9 to 13, to write a speech or letter addressed to the UN, about their hopes and fears about the climate emergency as well as specific policy recommendations. Launched to coincide with the closing of COP26, the United Nations Climate Change Conference, these are letters and speeches helping to identify what the youth today think are the most pressing aspects and of the climate emergency.

The judging panel includes Dr Stephanie Sodero (Lecturer in Responses to Climate Crises at the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute), Gareth Owen OBE (Humanitarian Director at Save the Children UK) and David Wightwick (CEO of UK-Med).

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Tue, 17 May 2022 10:48:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_hcri-comp-banner-colour-1400x400.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/hcri-comp-banner-colour-1400x400.jpg?10000
University employee completes 1600km cycling challenge to raise money for Ukraine appeal /about/news/university-employee-completes-1600km-cycling-challenge/ /about/news/university-employee-completes-1600km-cycling-challenge/506318A member of staff from The University of Manchester has completed a marathon cycling challenge, raising over £3000 for in the process.

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A member of staff from The University of Manchester has completed a marathon cycling challenge, raising over £3000 for in the process.

News and Media Relations Officer Joe Stafford completed the Ronde van Nederland route in 12 days, cycling a distance of 1600km - the equivalent of riding from London to the Ukrainian border. Along the way, he spoke to many people to raise the profile of the work UK-Med is doing, and posted about the journey on social media and his .

He quickly found that despite its reputation as a flat country, cycling in the Netherlands is often far from an easy ride – the east can be just as hilly as England in places, and conditions in the rest of the country can be extremely windy. 

Joe says: "The last two days were so difficult due to the wind that I could barely stay upright, or even breathe properly at times – it was really tough to complete! But I was so glad that I managed it – the knowledge that I was inspiring people to donate to such a good cause kept me going at the times when I felt like giving up."

He adds: "I met so many lovely people on my journey, and was amazed at how generous the Dutch were – the whole country seemed to be involved in the Ukrainian aid effort somehow, with even the smallest of villages hosting refugee families, fundraisers happening everywhere and Ukraine flags flying from houses and buildings in most places I cycled through.

Joe raised funds for UK-Med, a charity based at The University of Manchester which provides healthcare assistance during humanitarian crises around the world. A team of volunteer medics from the charity has set up clinics across Ukraine to provide care for the many people in need, and is also providing support and training for local healthcare staff who are having to respond to situations far beyond anything they’ve ever dealt with before.

“I want to congratulate Joe on his epic challenge to raise funds and awareness of our humanitarian work in Ukraine,” said Jackie Snell, UK-Med’s Interim Director of Fundraising. “Cycling 1600km is no easy feat, and we applaud Joe for his determination to take on this fundraiser!”

“With this donation we can get life-saving medical aid to where it's needed most, and support the rebuilding of a health system overwhelmed by war. We thank Joe and all of his supporters for their incredible generosity.”

For more information about the work UK-Med is doing in Ukraine, please visit their page.

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Fri, 13 May 2022 09:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_img-20220506-wa0005-2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/img-20220506-wa0005-2.jpg?10000
HCRI to host annual Careers in Humanitarianism day for students and sixth-formers /about/news/hcri-to-host-annual-careers-in-humanitarianism-day-for-students-and-sixth-formers/ /about/news/hcri-to-host-annual-careers-in-humanitarianism-day-for-students-and-sixth-formers/501300The Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) will host its annual on 29 April 2022 in University Place.  

It is set to be an exciting day, with a plethora of speakers from organisations such as Save the Children, UK-Med, Médecins Sans Frontières and many others. 

The event is open to all University of Manchester students, with sessions dedicated to medical humanitarianism, child protection and a school session open to sixth form students.

Speaking in the first plenary is UK-Med CEO, David Wightwick. David joined UK-Med in January 2018 as the new Chief Executive of the organisation. He has a background as a Senior Adviser in emergency response with WHO, as Global Operations Director for Merlin, Health Director with GOAL, Director of Operations Management at Save the Children International and as a Country Director with IMC. 

Other speakers include Yasser Kamaledin, who has been working with MSF since 2012, as their Humanitarian Aid Coordinator.  Since the onset of the Syrian war, Yasser has worked with refugees from Syria in the MENA region and across the migration path in Italy and Agreed. As a humanitarian operations coordinator, he has developed and led the on-ground implementation of medical humanitarian programs in a variety of countries including Afghanistan, Iraq, Lebanon and Kenya. Prior to working with MSF, Yasser worked with UNHCRI in refugee protection, before that he was working in healthcare as pharmacist. 

HCRI is also proud to have Gareth Owen who is the Humanitarian Director of Save the Children UK. Over the last two decades he has led responses to numerous emergencies all over the world including the Boxing Day Tsunami, Pakistan and Haiti earthquakes, Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar, East Africa and Niger food crises and the Somalia, Angola, Kosovo, Iraq, Afghanistan and Syria conflicts. Today, he leads a team of 190+ humanitarian professionals and in June 2013 he was awarded the OBE for ‘For services to Emergency Crisis Response Abroad’. 

To secure your free place at this fantastic event, .  

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Tue, 05 Apr 2022 16:42:34 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_chdsalcimage.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/chdsalcimage.png?10000
University staff member cycling 1400km to raise money for Ukraine war victims /about/news/cycling-1400km-to-raise-money-for-ukraine-war-victims/ /about/news/cycling-1400km-to-raise-money-for-ukraine-war-victims/500308A member of staff from The University of Manchester is set to cycle around the entire circumference of The Netherlands – 1400km in total – to raise funds for UK-Med’s Ukraine Appeal.

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A member of staff from The University of Manchester is set to cycle around the entire circumference of The Netherlands – 1400km in total – to raise funds for UK-Med’s Ukraine Appeal.

News and Media Relations Officer Joe Stafford was so moved by the images of refugees fleeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the harrowing stories told by people in the firing line, that he decided he had to help in some way.

UK-Med - a charity based at The University of Manchester - has provided humanitarian healthcare assistance during crises around the world, and is currently seeking to raise money to provide emergency medical aid for the millions of people displaced by the war. 

Their expert medical team is currently based in Lviv, and is working tirelessly by visiting hospitals, health facilities, shelters and centres for internally displaced people to understand the critical health needs caused by the conflict. They are working closely with partners on the frontline to rapidly assess priority health needs, in order to enable them to provide support quickly to affected communities.  

They hope to raise enough money to fund a range of health response options, potentially including a World Health Organisation approved facility to provide emergency care for injuries and other significant healthcare needs. , which is the size of a football field, can provide triage, first aid and treatment for minor trauma to over 100 people a day.

Joe will be cycling the challenging Ronde van Nederland route, which broadly follows the coastlines and borders around the whole of The Netherlands. Along the way, he plans to speak to as many people as he can to raise the profile of the work UK-Med is doing, and he will be posting about the journey on social media.

“I have Ukrainian colleagues and acquaintances, and what they are going through right now is simply unimaginable – their friends and families are either trapped in basements sheltering from Russian missiles, or have fled the country leaving their whole lives behind. We in the UK have a responsibility to help however we can, whether that be offering shelter through the Homes for Ukraine scheme, raising funds or donating much-needed supplies.”

“This is a wonderful thing to do on behalf of UK-Med’s work in delivering essential emergency healthcare to Ukraine and its neighbouring countries,” said The University of Manchester’s Professor Tony Redmond, who founded UK-Med. “Thank you so much Joe - every penny you raise will go towards relieving the terrible suffering of the Ukrainian people.”

To donate to Joe’s fundraising appeal, please visit , where Joe will also be posting updates about his journey. For more information about the work UK-Med is doing in Ukraine and Poland, visit their page.

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91ֱ charity launches urgent appeal to provide Ukraine medical aid /about/news/urgent-appeal-to-provide-ukraine-medical-aid/ /about/news/urgent-appeal-to-provide-ukraine-medical-aid/497470A humanitarian charity based at The University of Manchester has launched an urgent Ukraine Appeal, as it seeks to raise money to provide emergency medical aid for the millions of people displaced by the Russian invasion of the country.

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A humanitarian charity based at The University of Manchester has launched an urgent Ukraine Appeal, as it seeks to raise money to provide emergency medical aid for the millions of people displaced by the Russian invasion of the country.

, which was founded by Professor Tony Redmond OBE in 1995, has provided humanitarian healthcare assistance during emergencies around the world. It has launched the appeal with the backing of Greater 91ֱ Mayor Andy Burnham, as the crisis deepens in Ukraine and its neighbouring countries.   

More than two million people have already fled the country, many of whom left with just the clothes on their backs and a few meagre possessions. Tens of thousands have injuries or pre-existing health conditions, and temperatures across the region are still dropping below freezing. 

The World Health Organisation has reported dangerously low oxygen supplies inside Ukraine, and vaccinations have stopped despite the fact that only 40% of the country’s population had been vaccinated for Covid-19, and it had been battling a polio outbreak since last October. 

As the number of civilian casualties and deaths continues to rise and hospitals are bombed by the Russian forces, healthcare workers both inside and outside Ukraine need urgent support with surgical and trauma care.  

A UK-Med team has flown to Poland to meet potential partners, understand more about the refugee health needs on the Polish border, and discuss how it can support the emerging health emergency triggered by the conflict. The charity is now also providing support in Ukraine itself by embedding its surgical team into overwhelmed hospitals.

The money will support their roving medical teams who are working across Poland and Ukraine, but could also fund a World Health Organisation approved Health Facility to provide initial emergency care of injuries and other significant healthcare needs. , which is the size of a football field, can provide triage, first aid and treatment for minor trauma to over 100 people a day. 

“UK-Med expresses its gravest concern for the safety, health and well-being of all those affected by the humanitarian tragedy which is fast unfolding in Ukraine and its bordering countries,” said UK-Med CEO David Wightwick. “Our charity saves lives in emergencies, and we believe everyone should have the healthcare they need when disasters and crises hit. When health systems are overwhelmed, we get expert health teams to where they are needed fast. Europe is on the brink of a humanitarian catastrophe - that’s why it’s vital that we are sending a team of experts to talk with our partners and assess how we can best support those most in need.”

"91ֱ has a proud history of responding to humanitarian crises,” said Professor Tony Redmond OBE. “The University of Manchester has always been part of this, and it has social responsibility as one of its three core goals. To this end it has facilitated the work of UK-Med and developed the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute, establishing a unique partnership working to the benefit of the most needy in their times of need". 

To donate to the Ukraine Appeal please go to: . For further details on how to support UK-Med, please contact Director of Communications and Fundraising Jackie Snell at Jackie.snell@uk-med.org. 

You can stay up to date with developments on UK-Med’s , , and pages.  

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Thu, 10 Mar 2022 11:31:27 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_51923644226-5ace45455c-o.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/51923644226-5ace45455c-o.jpg?10000
Emergency Medicine expert named Young Researcher of the Year by RCEM and NIHR /about/news/emergency-medicine-expert-named-young-researcher-of-the-year/ /about/news/emergency-medicine-expert-named-young-researcher-of-the-year/493366The University of Manchester’s Dr Anisa Jafar has been named as Young Researcher of the Year by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) and the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM).

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The University of Manchester’s Dr Anisa Jafar has been named as Young Researcher of the Year by the National Institute of Health Research (NIHR) and the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM).

The joint awards, in their fifth year, recognise outstanding contributions of NHS consultants and trainees in the conduct of clinical research in the field of Emergency Medicine.

Dr Jafar is presently undertaking an NIHR Academic Clinical Lectureship at 91ֱ Royal Infirmary and The University of Manchester’s Humanitarian & Conflict Response Institute (HCRI). 

The judging committee found Dr Jafar to be an excellent role model for young researchers and were enthused by Dr Jafar’s commitment to global health and her well thought-out research project.

Dr Jafar is incredibly dedicated to cultivating research collaboration for Global Health and Emergency Medicine. She is one of the creators of the Global Emergency Care Collaborative, a platform which enables collaboration between colleagues interested in Global Health and Emergency Medicine.

She has also created a committee mapping UK engagement in Global Health, engaged her colleagues through Literature Reviews, and supported junior colleagues to develop their research profiles.

Dr Jafar’s research aims to understand how Global Health impacts Emergency Medicine in the UK. By interviewing Emergency Medicine professionals who have Global Health experience and querying how this impacts their practice, she hopes to identify the barriers and enablers for integrating Global Health into Emergency Medicine.

“RCEM has been proud to support the joint awards again this year, which continue to recognise excellence in Emergency Medicine research - particularly in light of the challenging conditions over the past 12 months,” said Alasdair Corfield of the RCEM Research Committee. “We recognise the hard work of all the nominees and awardees, and are encouraged to see the impact of their research activity on improving patient care.”

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Thu, 10 Feb 2022 13:12:20 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_dranisajafar.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/dranisajafar.jpg?10000
UNESCO International Mother Language Day 2022 /about/news/unesco-international-mother-language-day-2022/ /about/news/unesco-international-mother-language-day-2022/491306Did you know there are around 200 languages spoken in 91ֱ at any one time?

UNESCO’s International Mother Language Day is a worldwide annual observance held on 21 February to promote awareness of linguistic and cultural diversity and to promote multilingualism.

2022 is the fifth year that 91ֱ has celebrated International Mother Language Day. The events taking place this year involve libraries, cultural venues, community groups, universities, schools, poets and writers, collaborating and presenting language-focused events for communities across the city.

Civic Engagement is one of the University’s key strategic themes and our creativity-championing research platform is delighted to be coordinating a number of online events with colleagues from HCRI and the Linguistic Diversity Collective, including:

  • 22 February 2-4pm:
    Staff and student fieldworkers will present video recordings and photos from their field sites; followed by a discussion of the sociolinguistic setting in which children learn to speak their mother language(s). 
     
  • 22 February 7-8.30pm:
    A virtual roundtable discussion on the challenges and opportunities of (heritage) language learning during a global pandemic.
     
  • 23 February 3.30-5pm:
    Join us for Kathputli Utsav - A Festival of Traditional Indian Arts. Celebrate cultural and linguistic diversity with the Kathputli Colony, a colony of street performers in Delhi, India.
     
  • 24 February 4pm:
    This online activity will actively involve speakers of different ages and proficiencies of languages spoken in 91ֱ - the intended audience are teachers and students at supplementary schools, those attending community centres, and anybody interested in exploring their own language. 

Find out more about International Mother Language Day 2022, including the full programme of events:

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Wed, 26 Jan 2022 14:21:34 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_imld-cover-image.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/imld-cover-image.jpg?10000
New climate writing competition launched in wake of COP26 conference /about/news/new-climate-writing-competition-launched-in-wake-of-cop26-conference/ /about/news/new-climate-writing-competition-launched-in-wake-of-cop26-conference/485706The University of Manchester has launched a national climate writing competition for young people in the aftermath of the recent COP26 conference in Glasgow.

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The University of Manchester has launched a national climate writing competition for young people in the aftermath of the recent COP26 conference in Glasgow.

Organised by the University’s Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute in collaboration with Save the Children UK and UK-Med, a frontline medical aid charity, Words for your World invites students aged 13-18 to write a letter to the UN expressing their hopes and fears about the climate emergency.

As part of the competition, teachers and students will have access to specialist workshops and resources to help them to write their letters. An expert judging panel will be led by Lecturer in Responses to Climate Crises Dr Stephanie Sodero, and further judges will be announced in the New Year.

The competition will close on Earth Day 2022 (April 22), and the winner and runners-up will be invited to a special reception in summer. The best entries will also be published on the University’s website.

“UK-Med is proud to be part of the ‘Words for Your World’ competition - the most powerful and important voices in this debate are the younger generation of climate activists, and our role is to amplify those voices,” said David Wightwick, CEO of UK-Med. “Together we can keep up the momentum following events like COP26 to push for real change. There is so much more to be done to prepare for the growing impacts of the climate emergency on communities around the world.”

“Children of today will face seven times more heatwaves and at least double the number of droughts than their grandparents experienced,” said Gareth Owen OBE, Humanitarian Director at Save the Children UK. “They have inherited a problem not of their own making, and it is important that we amplify their voices - the climate crisis is a child rights crisis.”

For more information about the competition, please visit
. For more information about the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute, please visit

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Thu, 09 Dec 2021 12:02:12 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_climate.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/climate.jpg?10000
The climate emergency is a humanitarian crisis, say aid experts /about/news/the-climate-emergency-is-a-humanitarian-crisis/ /about/news/the-climate-emergency-is-a-humanitarian-crisis/478585A new report from The University of Manchester’s Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute, UK-Med and Save the Children is calling for the climate emergency to be treated as a humanitarian crisis.

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Aid workers warn that we are currently unprepared for the crises both caused and made worse by the climate emergency, and every year, the lives and livelihoods of millions of people are being destroyed by disasters, with 1 in 33 people in the world expected to need aid in 2021.

Now, a new report from The University of Manchester’s Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute, UK-Med and Save the Children UK - with funding from the UK Disasters Emergency Committee - is calling for the climate emergency to be treated as a humanitarian crisis.

It says that urgent changes need to be made by the aid system to deal with the escalating catastrophe, as well as drawing hope from good practice around the world and suggesting some key recommendations.

As the climate crisis worsens, increasing numbers of people will be left without healthcare, shelter, and food. The report addresses key issues facing the sector, including understanding the scale of the challenge, identifying different threats and recognising best practices that need to be replicated and scaled up.

The report could not come at a more urgent time - the UN’s COP26 Climate Change Conference COP26 is being held in the UK for the first time in November, and this presents a once-in-a-generation chance to shift the dial and ensure the humanitarian sector and communities at risk are prepared and able to meet this threat.

"Climate change is happening now - it will undoubtedly impact many aspects of life, and will hit vulnerable people the hardest,” said David Wightwick, CEO of UK-Med. “The next decade will be crucial - we need to adapt quickly to the increase in extreme weather, disasters and humanitarian crises, so that we can protect as many people and families as possible.”

“The humanitarian sector simply cannot wait until it's too late. We're proud as 91ֱ organisations to be taking the reins and calling on policy makers, humanitarian organisations and donors to listen to the report and make the changes we need, now."

“We also wanted to make our seven recommendations to be as accessible as possible, so we worked with an artist to create a that appeals to everyone from teenagers to senior citizens, as well as policy makers," she added.

The study was conducted with community members, aid workers, academics and organisations from all across the world. The findings and recommendations, along with an interactive digital story, can be accessed at
.

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Tue, 19 Oct 2021 14:54:55 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_philippines-page-20-1536x1152.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/philippines-page-20-1536x1152.jpg?10000
91ֱ revealed as a ‘Northern Humanitarian Powerhouse’ /about/news/manchester-revealed-as-a-northern-humanitarian-powerhouse/ /about/news/manchester-revealed-as-a-northern-humanitarian-powerhouse/474501Greater 91ֱ humanitarian organisations benefited the lives of more than five million of the world’s most vulnerable people in 2020, it has been revealed.

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Greater 91ֱ humanitarian organisations benefited the lives of more than five million of the world’s most vulnerable people in 2020, it has been revealed.

The impact of eight global organisations headquartered in the city was revealed at an event last night (THURSDAY) attended by regional MPs and city leaders.

MPs Afzal Khan and Mike Kane were among the guests at the Greater 91ֱ, Global 91ֱ event hosted by landmine clearance charity the Mines Advisory Group (MAG), in partnership with Syria Relief and the University of Manchester's Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI).

Humanitarian organisations at the event announced that their work had supported over five million people across more than 100 countries in 2020, from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe.

The event staged at 91ֱ's People's History Museum, saw MAG, Syria Relief, HCRI, UK-Med, Hope for Justice, In Place of War, Omega Research Foundation and GISF showcase their work to guests including MPs, the Lord Mayor and Lady Mayoress of Manchester and culture and business leaders.

Afzal Khan, the 91ֱ Gorton MP and Shadow Deputy Leader of the House of Commons, said: “I am delighted to see the humanitarian community coming together to demonstrate what a powerful and positive impact 91ֱ has around the world. From Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, and from clearing landmines to fighting modern slavery, 91ֱ NGOs and charities are making a real difference by supporting communities in some of the most vulnerable and conflict-affected countries across the world."

At the event, rising star and BBC Rap Game UK contestant, Meduulla, unveiled a music video for her brand new track “Home,” a song written to reflect “Global 91ֱ''.

Maruvaashe Shongedza, known professionally as Meduulla, was born in Zimbabwe but raised in 91ֱ.

"91ֱ is such a great city — a city of sanctuary, a welcoming home for many refugees and the place so many amazing international humanitarian charities have decided to call their home too," Meduulla said while unveiling the video for her new track.

"It's a city with a heart, I’m proud to be both Zimbabwean and Mancunian."

MAG CEO Darren Cormack said: "MAG is delighted to host this event to celebrate the life-saving humanitarian work that organisations across 91ֱ are undertaking every day.

"Whilst global in nature, employing 5,000 staff and working in over 25 countries, we are also proudly Mancunian. We take inspiration from our city’s rich history of innovation and social change as we carry out our mission to save lives and build futures for people affected by conflict.”

Syria Relief CEO Othman Moqbel spoke at the event about the importance of charities and humanitarian organisations based outside of London: "91ֱ is a Northern Humanitarian Powerhouse. It's home to not just some of the leading charities and NGOs in the UK but in the world. The eight organisations joining us tonight reached a combined total of over five million women, girls, boys and men in over 100 countries in 2020. That's amazing — and it speaks volumes of the kind of globally connected and compassionate city 91ֱ is."

The event also saw the official signing of a new and ground-breaking partnership between HCRI and MAG.

Professor Larissa Fast, the Executive Director of the University of Manchester's HCRI, said: "This partnership will facilitate an even closer relationship between MAG and HCRI, which aims to develop research to help the world move more quickly and efficiently towards the goal of a landmine-free future. HCRI is proud to work alongside charities like MAG, who are saving and changing lives worldwide.”

In the face of increasingly complex humanitarian crises, the event sought to remind attendees that 91ֱ is a ‘Northern Humanitarian Powerhouse,’ brimming with talent and expertise, and a diversity of organisations doing vital work to save lives and build safer futures for women, girls, boys and men around the world.

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Fri, 17 Sep 2021 15:45:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_hcriexecutivedirectorlarissafast.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/hcriexecutivedirectorlarissafast.jpg?10000
Larissa Fast appointed as Executive Director for the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) /about/news/larissa-fast-appointed-as-executive-director-for-the-humanitarian-and-conflict-response-institute-hcri/ /about/news/larissa-fast-appointed-as-executive-director-for-the-humanitarian-and-conflict-response-institute-hcri/471468

We are delighted to announce that Larissa Fast, Professor of Humanitarian and Conflict Studies, has been appointed as the new Executive Director of the University of Manchester’s Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI).

Professor Bertrand Taithe, co-founder of HCRI and Executive Director for the past 13 years, will step down on September 1 to focus on his research on the cultural history of humanitarian aid and humanitarian medicine.

He said: "This is a very exciting time for HCRI and our work in the humanitarian sector.

"We have built an exciting research institute and a great community of learning around humanitarianism, global health, disaster response, and peace studies.

"I look forward to seeing HCRI expand and develop under Larissa’s leadership. Larissa’s expertise and insight across the humanitarian sector, including academia and policy, makes her perfectly placed to take HCRI forward through its next chapter.”

Larissa joined The University of Manchester in 2016 as a Fulbright-Schuman Research Scholar, having spent time on faculty at the Kroc Institute, University of Notre Dame (USA), and at Conrad Grebel University College (University of Waterloo, Canada).

Outside of academia Larissa also has extensive policy and practice experience, including positions at ODI’s Humanitarian Policy Group and as an AAAS Science and Technology Policy Fellow at the US Agency for International Development.

On her new appointment, Larissa said: “I’m very much looking forward to stepping into the role of HCRI Executive Director in September.

"Having spent the last three years as part of HCRI’s senior leadership, I have seen first-hand the impact HCRI’s work and partnerships have had on the wider humanitarian sector.

"I am proud to lead such a forward-thinking and collaborative institute and look forward to working closely with staff, students, and our many external partners.”

HCRI is a leading global centre for the study of humanitarianism and conflict response, global health, international disaster management, and peacebuilding at the University of Manchester. Bringing together disciplines from medicine to the humanities, it explores questions and issues related to what the United Nations calls the ‘triple nexus’ – humanitarian response, development, and peace. Its work is driven by a desire to inform and support policy and decision-makers, to optimise collaborations between partner organisations, and to foster increased understanding and debate.

Alongside her role as Executive Director, Larissa will continue her research endeavours, focused on the uses of and as Principal Investigator on the project.

You can find out more about the work of HCRI via .

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Fri, 27 Aug 2021 11:12:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_larrisafast.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/larrisafast.jpg?10000
The University collaborates with 91ֱ International Festival /about/news/the-university-collaborates-with-manchester-international-festival/ /about/news/the-university-collaborates-with-manchester-international-festival/461027MIF logoThe University of Manchester is a proud Silver Supporter of the , as such we are working collaboratively on a number of flagship events as part of MIF21. Both students and academics are involved in the Festival, which takes place from 1-18 July and spills across the city, from 91ֱ Central to Piccadilly Gardens.

Big Ben artwork in Piccadilly GardensThe latter, Piccadilly Gardens, is the location of a monumental participatory artwork entitled . Covered in 20,000 copies of books that have shaped British politics, this colossal 42m replica of Big Ben will inspire new conversations about what we value, drawing from 91ֱ’s unique and independent spirit. Our students have been involved in the project at an operational level, helping with the finishing touches of the structure. They’ve also been researching the political and activist books connected with the project, alongside academics and researchers from the team.

Crawford House, home to the 91ֱ Deaf CentreThe University is also involved with unique and innovative public artwork designed by Christine Sun Kim. All across the city of Manchester, playful, political and powerful captions have been installed on streets and buildings. The University’s Crawford House building, home to the , is one of many iconic locations across the city displaying captions throughout the festival.

The University is also involved in the launch event for – a moment of reflection and hope created with refugee communities in the city. An epic cultural journey across Europe transcending borders, politics and language, The Walk is centred on Little Amal, a 3.5-metre puppet of a nine-year-old refugee girl who is setting out from the Syria-Turkey border in July on an 8,000-kilometre odyssey to 91ֱ in search of her mother. Little Amal represents displaced children around the world, many separated from their families and all more vulnerable during the pandemic. The University will host a suite of offshoot events surrounding this launch, including a thought leadership panel event with academics, city leaders and the Creative Producer of The Walk.

More details about these offshoot events will be announced soon. In the meantime, head over to to explore the full programme for this year’s Festival.

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Wed, 14 Jul 2021 11:02:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_mif-logo-blk-silversupporter2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/mif-logo-blk-silversupporter2.jpg?10000
HCRI contributes to Big Ben Lying Down with Political Books artwork /about/news/hcri-contributes-to-big-ben-lying-down-with-political-books-artwork/ /about/news/hcri-contributes-to-big-ben-lying-down-with-political-books-artwork/464651 is a monumental participatory artwork at this year’s by Argentinian artist Marta Minujín. The installation, featuring a 42-metre structure of London’s iconic Big Ben clock tower, is covered in 20,000 donated political books that visitors are invited to take away for free at the end of the festival.

Marta Minujín approached several 91ֱ and Salford-based organisations including HCRI, to put together a list of 160 book titles that have shaped British politics, including forgotten histories, neglected voices and books that will influence the future of Britain or point to the diverse political and social issues in today’s Britain.

Greater 91ֱ has a unique history in British politics, from the Peterloo Massacre to the formation of the Guardian newspaper. This campaigning spirit is still alive and kicking across the region today, which is the reason Marta Minujín chose to bring the UK’s most iconic political symbol to 91ֱ to be reimagined as a new temporary national monument with knowledge curated in the North.

The collection of books is therefore a contemporary portrait of Britain’s politics, democracy, and political history, informed by a northern perspective. HCRI’s contribution, led by , Lecturer in Humanitarianism, Peace & Conflict Studies, includes titles on Britain and British people as humanitarian and peacebuilding actors as well as books that critically engage with contemporary domestic responses to social change. Other HCRI colleagues and affiliates also provided suggestions.

On being involved in the installation, Birte said:

The installation features several publications by HCRI academics:

- Sarah Roddy, Julie-Marie Strange, Bertrand Taithe

This book breaks new ground in humanitarian history. It builds on a vast range of archives to bring into sharp relief the history of philanthropy and fundraising in late Victorian and Edwardian Britain. The book makes a strong case for the importance of understanding charities as having one foot in the world of business and entrepreneurship.

– Billy Tusker Haworth

This policy brief reminds us how contemporary government crisis communication and responses often fails to recognise and include viewpoints that reflect Britain’s diverse social makeup.

– Roger Mac Ginty, Roddy Brett and Birte Vogel

This is an edited collection that looks at what it means to a British/Western academic and conduct research in countries affected by violence and war. It is critical reflection on how we produce knowledge about “others”, the power dynamics within this process, and whose voices we ultimately represent in (British) academia as a result.

Other titles submitted for inclusion by HCRI include:

  • Oxfam: A cause for our times - Maggie Black
  • Das Kapital - Karl Marx
  • Welfare of Children in Hospital: Committee Report of the Central Health Services - Council Stationery Office Books
  • The Unsung Sixties: Memoirs of Social Innovation - Helene Curtis and Mimi Sanderson
  • Prejudice and Tolerance in Ulster: A 91ֱ of Neighbours and" strangers" in a Border Community - Rosemary Harris
  • My Name is Why - Lemn Sissay
  • Black Flamingo - Dan Atta
  • Saving the Children: Humanitarianism, Internationalism and Empire - Emily Baughan
  • A is for Activist - Innosanta Nagara
  • The Beekeeper of Aleppo -
  • Girl, Women, Other - Bernardine Evarist,
  • Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity - Judith Butler

The incredible artwork can be viewed around the clock for free in Piccadilly Gardens until 18 July or visitors can book a to explore inside, including a film and soundtrack by Marta Minujín.

On 16, 17 and 18 July a three-day Book Redistribution Ceremony will take place, when Big Ben will be taken apart and visitors can take home one of the 20,000 books for free.

More information about the installation and a full reading list can be found on the website.

Photo credits: Fabio De Paola and Ezequiel Velazquez

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Tue, 13 Jul 2021 12:51:37 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_fabiodepaola2.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/fabiodepaola2.jpg?10000
Professor Thomas Schmidt appointed as Head of School for the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures /about/news/professor-thomas-schmidt-appointed-as-head-of-school-for-the-school-of-arts-languages-and-cultures/ /about/news/professor-thomas-schmidt-appointed-as-head-of-school-for-the-school-of-arts-languages-and-cultures/464195Professor Thomas Schmidt has been appointed as Vice-Dean and Head of School of Arts, Languages and Cultures (SALC), in the Faculty of Humanities, succeeding Professor Alessandro Schiesaro, who held the post for five years.Thomas SchmidtThomas returns to The University of Manchester, where he spent five years as Professor of Musicology and Head of the Division of Art History, Drama and Music. He has also held posts at Bangor University, the University of Frankfurt and the University of Huddersfield.

The role formally began on 1 July and is dedicated to developing and driving strategic decision-making across the School.

Professor Keith Brown, Vice-President and Dean of Humanities has said on the appointment: “I look forward to working with Thomas as he returns to 91ֱ in this new role. I am confident he will build on Alessandro’s many achievements and will lead the School from strength to strength." 

Prior to joining the University for his appointment as Head of School, Schmidt was Visiting Professor at the University of Frankfurt, before moving to the UK in 2005 as Professor and Chair of Music at Bangor University. From 2012, he was Professor of Music at The University of 91ֱ (later also leading the Division of Art History, Drama and Music), and from 2017 he was Dean of Music, Humanities and Media at the University of Huddersfield.

Thomas studied at the University of Heidelberg and as a Fulbright Scholar in Chapel Hill. His key research interests are in music of the 15th/16th and the 18th/19th centuries.

On his appointment, Professor Schmidt said: "I am delighted to have been appointed as Vice-Dean and Head of School of Arts, Languages and Cultures. I enormously look forward to returning to the institution where I previously spent some of the most fulfilling years of my career; I am honoured and excited to be working with a dedicated team of staff in one of the leading Arts and Humanities schools in the UK, and with the outstanding students it recruits.”

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Wed, 07 Jul 2021 14:10:48 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_tsheadshot.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/tsheadshot.jpg?10000
HCRI Postgraduate Researcher receives PhD award for distinguished achievement /about/news/hcri-postgraduate-researcher-receives-phd-award-for-distinguished-achievement/ /about/news/hcri-postgraduate-researcher-receives-phd-award-for-distinguished-achievement/463299Dr Margot Tudor, a recent Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) alumni, has received the Faculty of Humanities Award for Distinguished Achievement.Margot TudorDuring her PhD, Margot studied the history of United Nations peacekeeping missions during the Cold War period and the colonial legacies perpetuated by the missions. Her thesis 'Blue Helmet Bureaucrats: UN Peacekeeping Missions and the Formation of the Post-Colonial International Order, 1956-1971' was supervised by Drs Róisín Read, Laure Humbert, Eleanor Davey, and Steven Pierce. Margot explained where her idea for her thesis began: "I was originally motivated to research this topic following the controversial French 'Operation Sangaris' mission in CAR from 2013-2016. Press about this mission prompted me to ask questions about the use of force, humanitarianism, and colonial legacies in the context of international 'peacekeeping' missions in the Global South.

“My PhD project evolved out of conversations with Eleanor and other academic friends about examining these questions historically. My PhD was a history of United Nations peacekeeping missions during the height of decolonisation (1956-1971). It adopted a comparative approach to the first four armed UN missions: UNEF (Sinai and Gaza), ONUC (Congo), UNTEA (West Papua), and UNFICYP (Cyprus)."

Margot was also nominated for Postgraduate Researcher of the Year in the President’s Distinguished Achievement Awards. Supervisors, Dr Róisín Read, Lecturer in Peace and Conflict Studies at HCRI and Dr Laure Humbert Lecturer in Modern History, who nominated her for this award said:

"Margot has produced an exciting, ambitious and theoretically impressive thesis, which uncovers how mid-level peacekeepers deployed in Egypt, Congo, Papua and Cyprus perpetuated colonial structures and took inspiration from imperial administrations.

“Her PhD examiners were especially impressed by her imaginative use of sources and the breadth of secondary literature engaged with. Her hugely ambitious thesis covered multiple contexts and required research in a variety of archives in the UK and the US, as well as detailed historiography on all four of her case study contexts and the United Nations. That she was able to encompass such breadth and depth in her research is impressive. Furthermore, completing her studies in under three years while also producing two articles published with leading global history journals and building a research reputation for herself through presenting at conferences, summer schools, and invited talks is truly exceptional. The research itself spans global History, decolonisation, and international relations and makes important contributions to all three fields.

“Margot has been a vital and enthusiastic member of the research community at HCRI and beyond in the University. Alongside her research activities, she has also been a valued teaching colleague in HCRI and the History department. She has translated her skills in interdisciplinary research into a valuable teaching tool and has taught across a range of subjects, with excellent student and staff feedback. It has been a pleasure to help guide Margot through her PhD, and we cannot think of anyone more deserving of recognition for her contributions."

Margot currently works as Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Exeter’s Leverhulme-funded project 'Warnings from the Archive: A Century of British Intervention in the Middle East', alongside colleagues Dr Owen Thomas and Professor Catriona Pennell. The project compares the Mesopotamia Commission (1917) and the Iraq 'Chilcot' Inquiry (2009-2016), examining how these two inquiries were conducted and the political culture of learning lessons.

She said: “My team and I are deconstructing how inquiries received and produced knowledge, therefore influencing how contemporaries narrativised or remembered the intervention. Rather than focusing on why the interventions failed, we want to centre how particular lessons came to be foregrounded and promoted by these inquiries.”

Find out more about and her .

Margot was also recently awarded the , by the British International Studies Association (BISA).

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Tue, 29 Jun 2021 16:51:27 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_margot.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/margot.jpg?10000
Reflections from The 91ֱ Briefing on recovery and renewal from COVID-19 /about/news/reflections-from-the-manchester-briefing-on-recovery-and-renewal-from-covid-19/ /about/news/reflections-from-the-manchester-briefing-on-recovery-and-renewal-from-covid-19/458109The 91ֱ Briefing has been at the forefront of research into recovery and renewal from COVID-19.Over the past year, academics including , Drs , and from HCRI, and colleagues at Alliance 91ֱ Business School (AMBS), have shared global learning, best practice and research findings to a network of over 52,000 people in the emergency planning and humanitarian sector.

Since launching in April 2020, the 91ֱ Briefing has been an invaluable source of information for stakeholders in local government, communities, NGOs, and those on the frontlines of disaster management. The breadth of skills and combined insight from a multidisciplinary team of academics at HCRI and AMBS have been pivotal to this.

In a with a panel of emergency managers, Professor Duncan Shaw showcased the achievements of the 91ֱ Briefing over the past year, and plans for the University-wide team on COVID-19 recovery, renewal, and resilience going forward.

Achievements to date 

  • Published over 32 bi-weekly briefings.
  • Created a growing mailing list of over 52,000 people. 
  • Worked with international collaborators, sharing work from organisations such as the International Emergency Managers Society (TIEMS), The Royal College of Nursing, and the British Standards Institution (BSI) to find the best lessons from over 93 countries. 
  •   to support research into the long-term recovery of local communities from the damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
  • Contributed to the creation of a new British Standards Institute (BSI)  on recovery and renewal for resilience. The ISO connects lessons on recovery and renewal to give guidance to communities.

Key learnings from the past year

Prof. Shaw emphasised that the impacts highlighted through the work of Essex LRF allow us to understand which areas require commissioning and support.

  1. The group has worked in close partnership with the Essex Local Resilience Forum (LRF) who found that the impacts of COVID-19 can be felt across all aspects of society in the following areas:
  • The mental health of the population
  • Educational outcomes
  • Children and young people
  • Vulnerable adults
  • Levels of mortality and excess deaths
  • The physical health of the population
  • Health and social care services
  • Volunteering, voluntary sector and civil society
  • The Essex economy
  • Public transport
  • The environment and climate change
  • Crime and community safety

Prof. Shaw emphasised that the impacts highlighted through the work of Essex LRF allow us to understand which areas require commissioning and support.

  1. COVID-19 is distinct from other crises due to the unique factors of scale, disconnect, fragilities and change. Prof Shaw outlined each in the recent webinar:

Opportunities for the future

There are unique opportunities for change and to build resilience in the recovery and renewal from COVID-19. Prof. Shaw explained what this means and what is required to implement these changes:

Looking ahead to next year

The 91ֱ Briefing will continue to work with stakeholders and external partners to share international lessons. It will explore the themes identified with the Essex Local Resilience Forum to see what can be done from understanding where the impacts of COVID-19 have been and what activities or commission tools are needed.

The team will analyse a number of areas of recovery, including: microbusinesses, refugees, heritage cities, tourist economies, community resilience, recovery where there has been recovery before, and frameworks.

Researchers will be working with national and international partners (below) to better understand what is being done at a local level in recovery and renewal to build resilience.

 Partners in England and Scotland:

  • Essex resilience, Avon and Somerset resilience, Greater 91ֱ resilience, Thames Valley resilience, Clydesdale COVID Cooperation Group.

International partners:

  • Talcahuano Municipality, Chile; City of Vancouver, Canada; Ramallah Municipality, Palestine; National Ministry, Argentina; Miami, USA.

View the  or listen to the to hear from the other panellists to learn more.

The full panel of speakers include:

Duncan Shaw – Professor of Operational Research and Critical Systems, Alliance 91ֱ Business School

Piero Pelizzaro - Chief Resilience Officer, Milan, Italy

Luis Carvalho - Civil Protection, Municipal Service, Amadora, Portugal

Katia Tynan - Manager, Resilience and Disaster Risk Reduction, City of Vancouver, Canada

Chair: Harald Dragar, President of The International Emergency Managers Society (TIEMS), Norway

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Thu, 20 May 2021 12:17:58 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_rrrlogo.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/rrrlogo.png?10000
Creative collaboration visualises complex journey of blood from donation to transfusion /about/news/creative-collaboration-visualises-complex-journey-of-blood-from-donation-to-transfusion/ /about/news/creative-collaboration-visualises-complex-journey-of-blood-from-donation-to-transfusion/443107A research method used by Dr Stephanie Sodero, HCRI Lecturer in Responses to Climate Crises, is now available as a scrollable illustration, visualising her work on the formidable and often invisible journeys of medical supply chains. is a project funded by and that shares creative research methods used in the social sciences with the broader community, including government and NGOs, to support innovative research and enact positive social change. Some of the highlighted research methods include 'follow the thing,’ photo go-alongs, and participatory mapping. 

describes her initial vision for the project: "The main character is a drop of donated blood. The reader follows the blood drop journey, from testing to processing through to a car crash and the point of transfusion. I knew I wanted to focus on the blood drop, and the illustrator brought the story to life."

Illustrator, , designed the scroll to depict the journey of a single drop of blood to showcase how Dr Sodero used the ‘follow the thing' method.

Based on Dr Sodero's publication '', the fictional journey uses creative storytelling to outline the complex mobilities involved in the blood supply chain, from the point of donation to the point of care. Further, as shown in the illustration, Dr Sodero highlights connections to climate change. Namely that the blood donor system relies on fossil-fuelled transport, like trucks and planes, that contribute to climate change, and in turn, severe weather events disrupt the medical supply chains upon which society relies. 

As part of the Methods for Change project, the scroll can be accessed via an online platform that showcases the value of social sciences methods to researchers outside of academia. In today's interconnected world, where global supply chains both contribute to and are impacted by climate change, 'follow the thing' is a valuable research tool. It can be applied to a range of goods, from tea to smartphones, exposing unjust working conditions and environmental harms, encouraging more ethical consumer and corporate behaviour.

Dr Sodero adds: "By following the drop of blood, you get a sense of just how complex the blood donation journey is in terms of time, space, and pace, and given this, how such a journey is vulnerable to disruption from severe weather events like flooding and snowstorms. For example, in 2012, the  in Europe (located near Bristol) flooded, resulting in a two-week closure."

"My research centres on how medical supply chains – blood, saline, oxygen – are impacted by a changing climate. I co-lead a  working group where we discuss a range of goods, from abortion pills to PrEP, used to prevent HIV transmission. In terms of creative methods, we maintain a  of outside-the-box projects that explore mobile medical materials."

The 'follow the thing' method is useful for organisations, such as businesses, charities, activist organisations, government departments interested in thinking through unseen dynamics in provisioning, the environmental impacts of everyday products, and how these processes link to social and material inequalities. It may be used in research that proves vital for disaster management, fair trade, waste management, and more. An on how to use the method in more detail is also available.

To learn more about the Methods for Change project, visit their .

To learn more about Dr Stephanie Sodero's research, visit her .

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Research spotlight: Nicola Jones /about/news/research-spotlight-nicola-jones/ /about/news/research-spotlight-nicola-jones/437935

PhD student and alumna of the International Disaster Management MSc at HCRI, Nicola Jones, discusses stigma narratives in HIV public health policies, her work with the Terrence Higgins Trust, and researching HIV health services and disaster relief aid in Malawi.

How did your research interest in stigma develop? 

Nicola JonesMy master’s dissertation examined how chronic health conditions are managed alongside more acute health needs during disasters. In 2015, I conducted research in Mocuba, Mozambique, in the aftermath of a flood disaster. Focusing on HIV, I found that whilst outreach teams provided HIV testing and treatment, stigma prevented many people from accessing those services. This sparked my interest in researching stigma, specifically how it is shaped by the surrounding context and its implications for healthcare access. 

My PhD aims to develop a novel theory of stigma, which can be applied to public health and healthcare access. Specifically, I am interested in how social processes of power, identity, and space shape stigma in different contexts. Applying a stigma lens to HIV public health policies has revealed that stigma is produced through sexual health campaigns, which focus heavily on individual responsibility by mobilising narratives of risk and blame. Examining these narratives in a disaster context highlighted that one’s identity and surrounding environment shapes how stigma narratives are interpreted, expressed, and experienced. 

Can you tell us about your experience of field research in Lilongwe, Malawi?

Conducting fieldwork in Lilongwe was an eye-opening experience, and it completely changed how I saw my research and my understanding of public health. I spent six months conducting 116 interviews with a diverse group of participants, including people living with HIV, HIV-negative people, sex workers, men who have sex with men, trans women, and healthcare providers. I wanted to gain an insight into stigma from many different perspectives to understand how it impacted people’s lives differently. Some stories were harrowing and upsetting, whilst others were told through humour or a commitment to activism and stigma reduction. The most important thing I learned from this experience is that stigma is deeply personal, and it cannot be eradicated without hearing the voices of those it affects most. 

Overall, fieldwork was an exciting but challenging opportunity and one I’ll never forget. I met many inspirational people who made me feel so welcome. Malawi certainly lives up to its reputation as the “warm heart of Africa”. Malawi is also a beautiful country, and I made sure I took time out of my research schedule to go hiking in the mountains and fully appreciate my surroundings. A personal highlight for me was summiting Sapitwa Peak on Mount Mulanje.

How does your work at the Terrence Higgins Trust intersect with your PhD research?

In summer 2019, I changed my PhD to part-time and began working with the Terrence Higgins Trust as a Health Promotion Specialist in Oxfordshire. My responsibilities include designing and delivering sexual health outreach interventions to engage with populations who are disproportionately affected by HIV and sexual health issues or those who face barriers in accessing services. Specifically, I work with young people and black African and Caribbean communities. 

The understanding of stigma I have gained during my PhD has significantly influenced how I approach health promotion. I am acutely aware of the language I use when talking about sexual health. Many campaigns and policies position sexual health within a risk narrative, fuelling a stigma of risk-taking and ‘irresponsibility’, with little consideration for the competing priorities in a person’s life, which may prevent them from following public health guidance. 

The Terrence Higgins Trust is at the forefront of challenging HIV-related stigma. For example, the “Can’t Pass It On” campaign informs the public that effective HIV treatment now means people living with HIV cannot transmit the virus to others. My role within this organisation has provided me with excellent opportunities to disseminate my research and influence public health approaches to HIV. For World AIDS Day 2020, I hosted a public Zoom talk about my research findings and, more recently, delivered a presentation on stigma to clinical staff based in Oxfordshire’s sexual health services. 

What impact has your research had on those affected by HIV and the wider community?

I am currently drafting a report summarising my findings for the Ministry of Health in Malawi. This is part of my agreement with Malawi’s research ethics board. The report includes key recommendations for addressing stigma and improving access to HIV health services and disaster relief aid.

A little closer to home, I have used my research to propose an alternative approach to sexual health promotion among black African and Caribbean women in Oxfordshire. Public health approaches in the UK largely focus on behavioural change campaigns, delivered through a top-down approach, which positions those implementing the programmes as ‘experts’ and those whom they intend to reach as the ‘audience’. Furthermore, behavioural-focused campaigns overlook structural barriers to sexual health services and place the responsibility for HIV prevention and improved sexual health directly onto the individual whilst simultaneously erasing their voices in defining their own needs. Alternatively, I proposed a collaborative project with African Families in the UK, which focuses on uncovering and responding to the structural barriers that prevent black African and Caribbean women from accessing sexual health services. Oxfordshire County Council has awarded us funding to implement the project. Our goal is to develop culturally appropriate, multilingual health promotion videos that have been created from the bottom up, recognising that black African and Caribbean women are the experts in their own lives. 

What are your future research plans?

I plan to continue my research on stigma in the context of public health. In particular, I intend to apply my proposed stigma theory to a UK context and draw attention to how stigma is embedded within social processes of power, identity, and space. Additionally, a prominent research gap that emerged in my data from Lilongwe was the dearth of knowledge of how stigma affects heterosexual men and their capacity to access healthcare. In Malawi, although HIV prevalence rates are higher among women and sexual and gender minorities, heterosexual men are less likely to access HIV services and more likely to be diagnosed at a late stage of HIV infection. Yet, their specific needs and experiences have largely been overlooked in both research and policy. 

You can find out more about Nicola’s research on

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HCRI students share their volunteering stories /about/news/hcri-students-share-their-volunteering-stories/ /about/news/hcri-students-share-their-volunteering-stories/435764

Many students from HCRI’s  go onto varying careers in humanitarianism. It can be difficult to get paid experience in the sector as a student, and volunteering is highly valued by employers, showing dedication and initiative, as well as insight into the challenges faced by organisations working to help others.

HCRI spoke to their current students to find out what kind of volunteering they’re involved with while completing their studies, how they’ve adapted during the COVID-19 pandemic, and what they’ve gained from offering their time to various causes.

Filipa Correia de Almeida Serranito, 1st year BSc International Disaster Management and Humanitarian Response, with a minor in French

Filipa Correia de Almeida Serranito‘I volunteer for , translating pieces of research and other informative documents of several subjects. Since I have a good knowledge of languages, I decided that contributing to this project would be a great way to dedicate my time. Through this work, I was able to gain more knowledge about humanitarianism and new organizations of relevance to my areas of interest. Translating documents about the complexity of the humanitarian field has also shown me that I am in the right course and has made me love it even more. Apart from this, I was also able to improve my language skills and received some great insights from other translators in the project.’

Freya Stanton, 3rd year BSc International Disaster Management and Humanitarian Response

Freya Stanton‘I have been volunteering with for over a year. I normally volunteer in their charity shop but currently myself and another volunteer are looking to start a Depop account to cover the shop's temporary closure. Throughout the pandemic, they have been providing invaluable support to people experiencing homelessness, by helping them into accommodation and providing three meals a day. Volunteering with Reach Out to the Community has really opened my eyes to homelessness, and being a local charity means that volunteering in the shop isn't just sorting through donations and working at the till, but also having a cup of tea and a casual chat with clients and really seeing first-hand the difference being made.’

Holly Vipond, 3rd year BSc International Disaster Management and Humanitarian Response

Holly Vipond‘In 2nd year, I volunteered twice a week doing a breakfast shift at , a homeless organisation in Gay Village. The shifts included preparing breakfast and getting to know those who used the service. It was a really great experience which was sadly cut short due to covid, but definitely something I would do again in the future! Recently, I’ve become a social media coordinator for , who provide funding to a wide range of grassroots projects in Tanzania with focus on topics such as FGM/female sexual health, clean water, business empowerment and education. I work with a small team to control social media channels (mainly Instagram) in which we aim to provide greater awareness for the work TDT do.'

Kiya Hornby, 3rd year BSc International Disaster Management and Humanitarian Response

‘I started volunteering for 2018 as a Researcher. My role was to find organisations/activities that could be added to the signposting information that is used to help direct clients to other support networks. I chose to volunteer to learn new skills that my degree possibly could not teach me. Volunteering has given me the opportunity to network, meet new people and potentially further my future career. When the UK went into its first lockdown, Strive had to change the way they worked and moved to an entirely virtual operation. During this, they gave me the opportunity to begin a new position as a Virtual Visitor and provided me with the training needed to be able to interact with clients over the telephone or Zoom. This means I am now one of the people who is suggesting some of my previous signposting research to clients!'

Emily Parsons, 3rd year BSc International Disaster Management and Humanitarian Response

Emily Parsons‘This semester I have been volunteering with the organisation Migrant Support. Although the COVID-19 pandemic has meant that I have been unable to complete any in-person volunteering, I have been involved in Zoom sessions which have been focused on helping refugees with their conversational English skills. I have really valued this experience and have enjoyed interacting with both the refugees and the other volunteers. During uncertain times it has felt nice to feel like I can do something productive and help others.’

Beth Amos, MA Humanitarianism and Conflict Response

Beth Amos‘The has been a rewarding and fun project that has allowed me to connect with a variety of people as they practise their conversational English and settle into life in 91ֱ. Covering requested topics such as cultural traditions, Black Friday (and even cycling proficiency!), I have personally found it really interesting to hear stories from around the world in one room in Debdale (or on one computer screen)! I would encourage students to use their English to support learners and join the society.

Antonio Yao, MSc International Disaster Management

Antonio Yas‘Since October, I've been part of a team of who’ve gone to a homeless shelter in Stockport weekly and cooked a hot meal for the people there. Every week we cook something different and serve it up to whoever's hungry. Unfortunately, it’s been on pause due to Covid but after lockdown, we’ve planned to go twice as often! I’ve met some lovely people with a similar passion for helping the community. Cooking with them has been fun and my cooking skills have improved as a bonus! But the greatest benefit from the experience has been meeting the people at the shelter. I have been fortunate in my life so far that I have never been close to the reality of being homeless. Meeting and talking to these people has widened my view and made me appreciate more what I have in my life.'

HCRI Postgraduate Bursary (Volunteering Theme)

It’s great to see students enhancing their time at HCRI by getting involved with volunteering. If you’re interested in studying one of HCRI's courses in Autumn 2021, they’re offering a full-fee for current University of Manchester undergraduate students, or Returned Volunteers, who are able to demonstrate how their volunteering is relevant to studying at HCRI, and their vision of helping others in their future career. Applications are open now.

If you’d like to get involved with volunteering, The University of Manchester’s Volunteering Hub is a great way to find local and international opportunities, and there’s something for every interest, availability and skill area.

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Researching the Impact of Attacks on Healthcare (RIAH) website launch /about/news/researching-the-impact-of-attacks-on-healthcare-riah-website-launch/ /about/news/researching-the-impact-of-attacks-on-healthcare-riah-website-launch/432906A United Nations aid vehicle with bullet holes scattered across.The Researching the Impact of Attacks on Healthcare (RIAH) project, led by Drs , , Stephanie Rinaldi and  at the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI), has

The RIAH project aims to improve the understanding of the nature, frequency, scale, and impact of attacks on healthcare in conflict through enhanced data collection and analysis. Attacks on health often threaten the sanctity of healthcare, disrespect the right to healthcare, and violate international humanitarian law. As , healthcare workers are still coming under attack during the coronavirus pandemic. The new website will host the project’s latest research outputs, in-depth case studies, and developments. 

A collaboration with academic partners at the University of Geneva, Johns Hopkins, UC Berkeley, and Insecurity Insight, the website also features RIAH’s first . The findings address conceptual issues and methodological approaches to evaluating the wider and longer-term impact of attacks on healthcare in conflict. 

If you would like to know more and stay updated on the RIAH project, you can sign up to their mailing list via riah@manchester.ac.uk.

Find out more about the  project on HCRI's website.

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91ֱ presents diverse programme to mark UNESCO International Mother Language Day /about/news/manchester-presents-diverse-programme-to-mark-unesco-international-mother-language-day/ /about/news/manchester-presents-diverse-programme-to-mark-unesco-international-mother-language-day/432838As part of International Mother Language Day 2021, an event which celebrates the nearly 200 languages spoken in 91ֱ and the cultural diversity within the city, Creative 91ֱ is delighted to be coordinating a number of online events that will form part of this year’s programme.  

UNESCO’s International Mother Language Day is a worldwide annual observance held on 21 February to promote awareness of linguistic and cultural diversity and to promote multilingualism.  

It has been observed globally since 2000 and has important historical roots, as on 21 February, Bangladesh marks the anniversary of winning the hard-fought recognition for the Bangla language.  

2021 is the fourth year that 91ֱ has celebrated International Mother Language Day. The events taking place this year will be online, and will involve libraries, cultural venues, community groups, universities, schools, poets and writers, collaborating and presenting language-focused events.  

Creative 91ֱ has coordinated with colleagues from the Centre of New Writing, HCRI, and The University of Manchester Widening Participation and Schools teams to present a number of events, including:  

  • 5.30pm, 19 February  

  • 12.30pm, 19 February

  • 7pm, 23 February  

  • 2pm, 26 February  

  • 25 February  

You can see the full list of International Mother Language Day events here. 

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HCRI recognise PGT Outstanding Dissertation Award winners 2020 /about/news/hcri-recognise-pgt-outstanding-dissertation-award-winners-2020/ /about/news/hcri-recognise-pgt-outstanding-dissertation-award-winners-2020/428929

All of the students who’ve completed their Masters, during the added challenges and unpredictability of a global pandemic, should be extremely proud of themselves. Within HCRI, this year’s dissertations highlight not just the breadth of topics within each course, but the dedication, passion and adaptability of every student who’s worked to the highest standards, despite adversity.

As tradition, HCRI honour the students with the highest dissertation mark for Global Health MSc, International Disaster Management MSc, and Humanitarianism and Conflict Response MA respectively. Below, the 2020 award winners offer a summary of their brilliant final dissertations, along with their plans for the future.

Kate Mills, Highest dissertation mark for Global Health MSc

Kate MillsMy dissertation explored gender-based disparities within health impacts of human-induced climate change, aiming to address significant gaps in the literature. Focused on the uniquely vulnerable Melanesian sub-region of the Pacific, this research employed a combination of primary and secondary methods to understand the perceptions and knowledge of the linkages between climate change and women’s health. Six key linkages were identified, covering gendered social constructs, women in agriculture, nutrition and NCDs, vulnerable sub-groups, extreme climate events, and communicable diseases. A stronger understanding of these linkages is essential to enhance commitment, coordination and advocacy for integrating health, gender and climate change in targeted programming across Melanesia.

This course was a great opportunity to explore an important gap in the literature, and I look forward to applying the skills I have learned to my work in health research and programmes. 

Charlotte Bennemann, Highest dissertation mark for International Disaster Management MSc

Charlotte BennemannIn my dissertation, I examined how the efforts of the climate change and disaster management sectors could be aligned within the context of development by focusing on the shared concept of vulnerability. While both communities agree on the necessity of alignment to tackle their intertwined challenges, most approaches focus on terminology or conceptual similarities and propose the integration of one sector into the other. The relevance of the development sector is often neglected. I identified the reduction of vulnerability as the shared goal of the three sectors and developed the focal-systemic approach, which is a conceptual framework to align the efforts of the climate change and disaster management community within development.

On reflection, I particularly enjoyed the course’s interdisciplinary nature, which not only included the content but also the diverse background of staff and students. Going back to working with the German Development Cooperation (GIZ), I plan to work on cross-sectoral approaches of sustainable resource management as part of disaster management addressing linked challenges such as resource scarcity, food insecurity, conflict, climate change and now COVID-19.

Anna Llewellyn, Highest dissertation mark for Humanitarianism and Conflict Response MA

 Anna LlewellynMy dissertation explored the contemporary relationship between humanitarian video games and their pedagogical/educational potential. I focused on a specific mobile game, Bury me, my Love, to investigate whether video games give voice to refugees and refugee issues and whether this can be utilised and developed to facilitate further learning. First creating a 2-part theoretical framework from the literature, I then applied this directly to the empirical evidence gathered during an interview with the game’s developer and data from an online questionnaire completed by people who had previously played the game. Video games are an untapped resource for creative education and can express and portray complex humanitarian issues to a wide range of people.

On reflection, my favourite part of the MA was the Uganda field trip, where we got the opportunity to meet and learn from a variety of humanitarian actors as well as refugees. I’m currently in French Guiana working as an English language assistant to improve my French which will hopefully open doors as I embark on my humanitarian career!

 

A final congratulations to Kate, Charlotte, Anna, and all of HCRI’s graduates of 2020 for their fascinating, creative and conscientious dissertations.

 

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HCRI PGT Outstanding Achievement Award winners /about/news/hcri-pgt-outstanding-achievement-award-winners/ /about/news/hcri-pgt-outstanding-achievement-award-winners/428504

For anybody completing their Masters in 2020, a significant amount of their studies has taken place against a backdrop of COVID-19, uncertainty, and unexpected challenges. Despite this, the standard of work produced by HCRI’s students across all of their postgraduate courses has surpassed all expectations: testament to the resilience and commitment of their students.

Every year, HCRI honour the students with the highest overall mark for Global Health MSc, International Disaster Management MSc, and Humanitarianism and Conflict Response MA respectively. Below, this year’s award winners reflect on their studies, their experience at HCRI, and their plans for the future.

Ines Böhret, Highest overall mark for Global Health MSc

Ines Böhret"In 2017, I read about the MSc programme in Global health. I had just finished my BA in International Emergency and Disaster Relief, my son was learning his first words, and I decided to look for a new challenge. The significance of health in all its facets has always been fascinating to me and discovering Global Health issues in an interdisciplinary way sounded perfect.

"The plan to do my PGCert changed to the idea of doing the whole MSc programme and I experienced three - sometimes intense and challenging but also rewarding and exciting - years at UoM. I’m very grateful for everything I learned and for the team spirit we created in our cohort while writing our dissertations during this special time.

"During the course, my interest in issues of health equity was deepened and I started to put a particular focus on women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights. I am now involved in various projects and organisations aiming to do my part in reaching the goal of health for all by applying a gender and health equity lens. The knowledge and skills I gained in my MSc already support me in this endeavour."

Inès Decoster, Highest overall mark for Humanitarianism and Conflict Response MA

Inès Decoster"Following several volunteering experiences in the humanitarian sector, this master’s degree offered me the opportunity to further explore the practical and theoretical challenges of humanitarianism. I have enjoyed the broad range of topics covered from mental health in humanitarian practice to the experiences of young people in conflict and displacement or specific regions’ issues. Most of all, I have enjoyed learning from my lecturers and course mates’ variety of backgrounds and experiences and engaging first-hand with humanitarian actors and projects. I am currently working with an NGO that supports unaccompanied minors in Calais and my training guides me in my everyday practice."

Jessica Hambley, Highest overall mark for International Disaster Management MSc

Jessica HambleyI really enjoyed my year studying at HCRI. It was a privilege to be taught by researchers from such a wide variety of interdisciplinary backgrounds, and to study alongside so many amazing and inspirational classmates. 91ֱing disaster management in the midst of a global pandemic definitely had its challenges, but it was also a particularly unique experience that really highlighted the importance of the discipline itself!

"I’m now working in local government research on a range of different projects. One of these projects is a COVID-19 dashboard that helps leaders in Greater 91ֱ to plan and manage the pandemic response. Another project uses some of the GIS skills that I developed on this course to support the expansion of environmental initiatives, like sustainable urban drainage systems or enhanced tree planting. I wouldn’t be where I am today if I hadn’t studied this course – thank you to my wonderful fellow students and to the HCRI staff for such an invaluable experience.”

 

A final congratulations to Ines, Inès, Jessica, and all of HCRI’s graduates of 2020.

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Research Spotlight: Dr Jessica Hawkins /about/news/research-spotlight-dr-jessica-hawkins/ /about/news/research-spotlight-dr-jessica-hawkins/428192

In an interview with HCRI, Undergraduate Programme Director and Lecturer in Humanitarian Studies, Jessica Hawkins, shares her approach of using historical sociology in her research, state formation in Uganda, and mental health considerations for working in the field of humanitarianism.

Jessica HawkinsCan you tell us about the disciplines you use and why they are important for researching and studying humanitarianism and conflict?

My master’s in development studies sparked my interest in studying state formation through a historical sociology lens. Historical sociology is different to history, which looks at a particular moment in time, as it allows you to take a step back and look at it as longer processes of social change over a historical period.

My research interests are concerned with processes of how conflict changes the shapes of states and the people who live within those states and how it impacts those people over long periods of time. It, therefore, enables us to understand how humanitarian responses have changed. I recently applied a historical sociology lens to refugees in Uganda – a protracted situation that originates since the country became independent in 1962.

Why did you choose to position your research on state formation in Uganda?

I was always interested in Africa as a continent as my mum grew up in her teenage years in South Africa. I was researching state formation and state-building as part of my development studies master’s and I came across these real disjunctures and drastic changes in Uganda’s history. Pre-colonialism, Uganda had powerful kingdoms which were militarily powerful and economically prosperous. But then colonialism dismantled the kingdoms and any form of nationalism that might exist. More recently, Uganda has become this safe, stable, beautiful country that has so many ripples underneath it. The explains that outward appearances of nationality are still underpinned by complex local allegiances.

What is the value of using a historical sociology lens to look at the reach, origins, and effects of state power within developing countries?

I particularly use the sources of social power, which doesn’t just relate to the state but relates to how people achieve their goals, as I find it very interesting how power relations are structured in societies even in the past and how people use these sources of power to achieve their goals. Museveni, the current president of Uganda, similarly used the infrastructures that were in place to elevate himself in a position where he could fight a war against the central government to become president. I think it’s really interesting to look at how people alleviate their power to achieve what they want. My research tends to focus on military elites, political elites, social elites, and religious elites because it tells us the story of how conflict has been created and how states have then been formed as a result of that.

I have been developing a grant with Roisin Read (HCRI) and Briony Jones, a lecturer at the University of Warwick for a project entitled Citizens on the Move. We are looking at refugees who leave the UNHCR camps and what happens to them and how they claim citizenship from the place they now reside. The historical sociology lens is particularly useful to understand why refugees today leave the camps and look at the processes of how they’ve achieved their rights, their position, and their choices to move to a different place based on their historical relationship with the host country.

How might we revise taxonomies of 'failed and fragile states' to represent countries affected by conflict ethically?

This is linked to a paper awaiting publication which explores the idea of the failed state. The failed state discourse is incredibly problematic because it considers everything that a state cannot do and is not able to do. When you think about that in terms of development or even in terms of humanitarian response providing for its people, there is a tendency to assume that the state cannot do anything and requires intervention.

I use this historical sociology framework to look at how power is organised so that any humanitarian response or development initiative can be better tailored to support what is going on rather than trying to just replace the state. The state might be failing but within that state there are structures which function. For example, community groups and organisations provide relief for people. Upon researching 1980s Uganda I found that the state typically failed economically when it wasn’t providing for its citizens with poor development outcomes, especially in the Luwero Triangle in Northern Uganda.

How did your research on Northern Uganda lead to teaching trauma-informed educational practice?

Dr Rubina Jasani and I decided to launch the module – Mental Health and Psychosocial Support in Humanitarian Crises - a couple of years ago to look at all areas of mental health in humanitarianism from a social science perspective. We wanted to remind students that it’s not just about the recipients of aid that they need to think about, but it’s also about their colleagues and themselves. The module featured experiences from many different scholars and practitioners who work in this area which is why it currently isn’t running this academic year. Sadly, it wouldn’t work in an asynchronous format.

While I was researching conflict in Northern Uganda, I came across research that talked about humanitarians and local humanitarians and the kind of impact it was having on their own wellbeing. There is a focus on the wellbeing of victims of conflict or communities affected by conflict but humanitarians who are responding to that are also affected. In Uganda, there is a lot of psychosocial support for victims because they have experienced trauma due to conflict. NGOs that are employing people in Uganda and other low to middle-income countries tend to have all their counselling services in the head office which tends to be in the West. As funding is incredibly tight, however, their work is directed again at the victims of trauma and conflict; it is often the aid workers and their mental wellbeing that gets neglected. This can lead to serious instances of PTSD and burnout. As a sector, we need to look out for each other as well as those we are trying to help.

 

Please note: Modules are subject to change every academic year. Although is not running this academic year, it may become available to students in the future.

To find out more about Jessica's research, visit her .

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Fri, 11 Dec 2020 13:38:52 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_hawkins.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/hawkins.jpg?10000
HCRI academic receives funding for research into LGBTIQ+ experiences of COVID-19 /about/news/hcri-academic-receives-funding-for-research-into-lgbtiq-experiences-of-covid-19/ /about/news/hcri-academic-receives-funding-for-research-into-lgbtiq-experiences-of-covid-19/427484Lecturer in International Disaster Management, Dr Billy Tusker Haworth, has secured funding of nearly £10,000 for research into LGBTIQ+ experiences of COVID-19 in the UK and Brazil. received the funding from the University of Manchester’s Economic and Social Research Council’s (ESRC) Impact Acceleration Account (IAA) for his research into .

The IAA funding is awarded to help accelerate the impact of research, and, in doing so, will support Billy to analyse and yield outputs that will allow him to more effectively reach those who can use and benefit from the findings.

Billy said:

“The award is important for research that has any social responsibility element, particularly for something related to humanitarian work and especially so during COVID-19, which, as we know, is an ongoing crisis.”

The award will allow Billy to employ two research assistants. One research assistant will transcribe and translate interviews conducted in Portuguese, while the second will assist with adapting the findings for non-academic audiences.

The results of the project will be disseminated via a policy brief for the UK and a chapter for the HCRI COVID-19 book in English, and a journal article discussing the Brazilian results and a summary of the findings aimed at policymakers, NGOs, and support groups for LGBTQI+ people in Brazil in Portuguese. The funding will also contribute to an animated explainer video, which will help distil the research findings for an even broader audience.

When asked about the impact he hopes the research will have, Billy said:

“I hope the research will lead to broader awareness on every kind of level for a marginalised group facing particular challenges, and demonstrate strengths and resilience qualities that are often overlooked but can render better support and help through crises like the COVID-19 pandemic.

"Awareness might lead to many things and fundamentally influence the public as well as policymakers and practitioners. If they aren't aware of the issues facing particular groups, then strategies in response to crises are not going to reflect the needs of LGBTQI+ people and other minority groups, which are less likely to be documented in a detailed way.

"[…] I think it is important to document the experiences of people at risk during any kind of crisis, and the goal is that we can do things a bit better in the future.”

The University of Manchester was awarded a total of £1 million in 2019 to continue the excellent work of IAA1 and will continue to deliver IAA2 until 2023. The ESRC IAA is used to fund Knowledge Exchange and Impact activities across the University.

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91ֱ researchers secure funding to research recovery, renewal and resilience to COVID-19 /about/news/manchester-researchers-secure-funding-to-research-recovery-renewal-and-resilience-to-covid-19/ /about/news/manchester-researchers-secure-funding-to-research-recovery-renewal-and-resilience-to-covid-19/425762Alliance 91ֱ Business School (AMBS) has secured close to £1m in funding to support its research into the long-term recovery of local communities from the damage caused by the coronavirus pandemic.The project has been part-funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), part of UK Research and Innovation, and brings together specialists from AMBS, the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) and The University of Manchester to develop guidance and create a framework that can be used to build resilience in local communities post-COVID.

A team of academics will analyse how stakeholders such as local government, the emergency services and volunteer groups have responded to COVID-19 in the UK and overseas, before identifying the changes that need to be made to better support short-term recovery and drive long-term renewal within local communities moving forward.

Using this information, academics will partner with Local Resilience Forums – groups of representatives from local authorities and the wider public sector – in Merseyside, the Thames Valley and Essex to develop and test a resilience framework.

The framework will be designed to enable local communities to better plan, prepare and respond to emergencies like the coronavirus pandemic. For example, by sharing emergency services to better manage demand or utilising the support of individuals that want to help but aren’t affiliated to an official public body – commonly known as spontaneous volunteers – in the disaster response phase.

, Professor of Operational Research & Critical Systems at AMBS and HCRI, said: “The coronavirus pandemic has brought unprecedented challenges to communities across the world and as we enter the second wave many are rightly focused on how we come out of the other side, and how organisations can work together to drive long-term recovery in what is a very complex political landscape.

“With the support and funding from ESRC, we are now in a position to take our research one step further and will be working closely with regional stakeholders to share lessons of successful recovery, and use these learnings to develop an actionable framework that can be used to drive resilience at a local level in a world post-coronavirus.”

The funding announcement follows a 10-month project during which academics have been working with organisations worldwide to ensure local communities can recover from COVID-19. This includes specialists in the areas of critical systems, emergency response, community resilience, humanitarian aid and mobilisation, digital solutions and security, viable systems, healthcare delivery and operations management.

To follow the project,  – a newsletter that brings together international lessons and case studies on the recovery from COVID-19 and is shared with more than 52,000 people worldwide every fortnight.

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Research Spotlight: Dr Stephanie Sodero /about/news/research-spotlight-dr-stephanie-sodero/ /about/news/research-spotlight-dr-stephanie-sodero/420756In an interview with HCRI, Lecturer in Responses to Climate Change, Stephanie Sodero, talks about her research on vital mobilities, the movement of blood, and how medical supply chains are vulnerable to a changing climate.Stephanie SoderoTell us about your research focus on mobilities concerning contentious mobilities, vital mobilities, climate discourse, and climate pricing.

In my current research, I focus on vital mobilities - movements that impact life chances.

These are external societal mobilities of goods, people, and information that enable critical internal bodily circulations, such as the use of insulin and vaccines.

I am particularly interested in how global and diffuse medical supply chains are impacted by a changing climate, such as floods and hurricanes. My research is grounded in the mobilities paradigm, which examines the ubiquitous and complex mobilities and immobilities of people, objects, ecologies, and more, that make up contemporary society.  

How does your medical anthropology research contribute to wider research in humanitarian response, global health, and disaster management?

As a Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Medical Anthropology at the University of Edinburgh, I studied blood. That is: How does blood move from the point of donation to the point of care? How are these journeys susceptible to a changing climate?

I looked at the disruption to blood supply chains caused by snow and ice in Canada and by flooding in the U.K. Through my research, I highlight how these vital mobilities are vulnerable to a changing climate, information that is key for disaster management.

In reference to your doctoral thesis, which is the basis of your upcoming book: Under the Weather: Mobility in the Climate Crisis, what key themes do you address? 

In my dissertation, I tell the story of two record-breaking hurricanes that impacted Atlantic Canada (Nova Scotia is home).

In my book, which is currently under review, I use these cases to theorise the intersection of human mobility, fossil fuels, severe weather, and climate change. In short, fossil-fueled mobility creates carbon pollution that contributes to climate change. Moreover, in turn, severe weather, intensified by climate change, disrupts mobility. This circularity needs to be a central consideration in policy thinking and decision making.

Tell us about your current research on global trade in the mobility of medical supplies.

Right now, I am focusing on the vital mobilities of saline IV solution and oxygen. These are mundane but vital substances.

Globally, many medical products are sourced in low-wage, low-tax regions with minimal consideration of potential climate impacts. In 2017, Hurricane Maria hit Puerto Rico, a major manufacturer of medical supplies. Located in the Caribbean, Puerto Rico is vulnerable to more frequent and intense hurricanes due to climate change. In 2017, Hurricane Maria hit. Locally, healthcare suffered due to power outages, causing more than 4,500 deaths. In addition, there were also wider effects, including widespread saline IV solution shortages on mainland U.S. My research highlights the impacts of climate change on health care delivery.

How did you contribute to 2018 Being Human Festival? 

Just as blood circulates in the body, it also circulates in society. I created Bloodscape, a self-guided scavenger hunt that let residents see Edinburgh through the lens of blood - including changing trends, global campaigns and, even Harry Potter (J.K. Rowling wrote the series in Edinburgh). This event drew on research conducted at the University of Edinburgh in Medical Anthropology, such as my research on how severe weather disrupts blood delivery and  research on how immigrants use blood donation as a tool of social integration. 

What are your future research plans?

I plan to continue my research on vital mobilities, exploring diverse medical supply chains. Through this work, I want to draw attention to the complex and extensive journeys of medical supplies from the point of manufacture to the point of care, as well as address a critical gap in social scientific knowledge about global medical supply chains and their vulnerability to climate change, and identifying adaptation measures.

You can find out more about Stephanie’s research on

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Dr Larissa Fast contributes to 'Aid Workers: Ethics under Fire' exhibition /about/news/dr-larissa-fast-contributes-to--aid-workers-ethics-under-fire-exhibition/ /about/news/dr-larissa-fast-contributes-to--aid-workers-ethics-under-fire-exhibition/417540HCRI's Larissa Fast has worked with the Imperial War Museum North to develop a new exhibition titled 'Aid Workers: Ethics under Fire'.The ’s Director of Research, Dr Larissa Fast, has worked with to develop their new exhibition , which opened on 2 October 2020. Larissa’s research focuses on the causes and consequences of violence against aid workers, who may be threatened, injured, kidnapped or killed, and on attacks on healthcare and their impact.

Two people viewing the Aid Workers exhibitionIWM North invite guests to interact with the practical and ethical dilemmas that aid workers in humanitarian organisations face in assisting and protecting vulnerable populations fleeing conflict. Its website explains:

“Through combining personal ‘in the field’ testimonies and scenario-based interactives, you can put yourself in the shoes of an aid worker and consider how you might respond to complicated decisions about the reach of aid, funding, responsibility and risk.

The exhibition reveals the dilemmas encountered while operating in areas including Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, South Sudan, Syria and Yemen, from which over 17.5 million people have collectively fled due to recent conflict*”[1]

As a member of the advisory group for the exhibit, Larissa contributed to developing the interactive scenarios that ask visitors to consider how they might respond to the complicated and difficult decisions about risk, funding, and who to help. She tells us ‘It has been a privilege to work with the IWM team and to think through how the exhibit can help the general public understand more about the everyday dilemmas and experiences of aid workers in conflict situations.’

The exhibition is held at IWM North in Salford and forms part of IWM’s , a free season of exhibitions which ends on 31 May 2021.

Find out more about Larissa’s research on her .

[1] IVM North . * Statistic sourced from UNHRC’s Global Trends, Forced Displacement in 2018 report and UNHRC’s Global Appeal 2018 - 2019.

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University research into refugee experiences part of major new exhibition /about/news/university-research-into-refugee-experiences/ /about/news/university-research-into-refugee-experiences/416487From the First World War to the present day, countless lives have been affected by conflict, resulting in ordinary people making the difficult decision to flee their homes - this is the focus of a major new exhibition at London’s Imperial War Museum London, which features work by two researchers from The University of Manchester.

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From the First World War to the present day, countless lives have been affected by conflict, resulting in ordinary people making the difficult decision to flee their homes - this is the focus of a major new exhibition at London’s Imperial War Museum, which features work by two researchers from The University of Manchester.

Refugees: Forced to Flee is rooted in cutting-edge research which explores the decisions and consequences faced by those whose worlds have been turned upside down by war over the past 100 years.

Combining new research and real-life experiences with photographs, oral histories, documents and objects – many of which will be displayed for the first time – the exhibition will question why conflict forces people to leave once safe places.


Challenging perceptions by putting people’s experiences at the centre of the exhibition, it will explore why people flee their homes and take certain items with them, how they make their journeys and find safety, and the challenges that can be experienced when re-settling.

The first 91ֱ project included in the exhibition is Translating Asylum, led by Rebecca Tipton. 
This aims to enhance public understanding of language and communication challenges common to individuals who have been displaced by conflict. It also investigates historical and contemporary approaches to language support provisions for refugees, such as translation and interpreting services.

The second project is Reckoning with Refugeedom, led by Peter Gatrell. This aims to put refugees at the centre of modern history by accessing the perspectives of refugees from different backgrounds, through petitions and letters to the authorities, as well as personal correspondence and other source material. It looks at how refugees engaged with the history and circumstances of their displacement, and assesses how they understood and negotiated the personal and political consequences of ‘being a refugee’.

The exhibition is now open at Imperial War Museum London, and will run until 24 May 2021. For more information, including how to book tickets, visit .

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