Current research degree projects
Explore our current postgraduate research degree and PhD opportunities.
Explore our current postgraduate research degree and PhD opportunities.
This project investigates how workers in low-skilled and precarious jobs experience and demonstrate resilience while managing long-term mental health challenges. Using qualitative interviews and daily voice diaries, the project connects organisational and public health research to explore how work environments shape wellbeing, inequality, and inclusion in contemporary workplaces.
Gene Regulatory Networks (GRNs) orchestrate cell fate and are key to understanding disease. We has expertise in developing computational methods for single-cell omics data. This project will develop new computational approaches for single-cell RNA-seq, applying them to human datasets to discover targets and advance precision medicine.
This project investigates how civilians in Ukraine exposed to landmines, or living amid suspected contamination, adapt and maintain wellbeing under prolonged risk. Using mixed-methods research, it explores factors that promote or hinder resilience, coping strategies, and social cohesion, providing insights to inform civilian protection, risk education, and humanitarian response in conflict-affected settings.
This project will explore the dynamics of resilience in selected human-altered environments by developing a set of numerical toy models rendered as arcade-style computer games. Model systems might include wildfires at the wildland-urban interface, leveed rivers, sand mining, beach nourishment, or transportation networks in hazard zones.
Explore how private gardens can facilitate climate resilience. Taking a mixed-methods approach – combining spatial modelling, interviews and participatory methods – this project investigates how climate change, socio-demographic factors, and people’s willingness or resistance to change will shape the fundamental capacity of gardens to act as a cornerstone of urban climate resilience.
This PhD project understands migrant-led creative craft enterprises in the UK as resilient, post-growth microeconomies. It will investigate how these practices generate cultural continuity, ethical local revival, and alternative futures in deprived areas, centring migrant agency and third-sector contribution within interdisciplinary debates on resilience, postgrowth futures, and migrant creativity.
This project explores how schools and families shape migrant children’s academic resilience in the UK. Using participatory and sensory methods, it amplifies children’s voices to surface links between inclusion and embodied resilience. Findings aim to inform school and family practices and foster collaborative, inclusive environments that support migrant pupils’ resilience.
This project explores how intersectional identities shape leadership and resilience in complex public systems facing continuous crises. This project reimagines system leadership as a socially embedded, equity-driven process, bridging lived experience, culture and adaptive governance to strengthen public and third sector responses in an era of uncertainty.
Drawing on an interdisciplinary resilience perspective, this project uses biographical interviews, discourse analysis and social network mapping to understand elasticity and brittleness in social networks of gay men and how, underpinned by a shift to online communities, networks of older gay men have changed over time with implications for wellbeing.
This interdisciplinary PhD explores how victimhood identities drive or prevent radicalisation, extremism, hate speech, and polarisation in Europe. Combining political psychology, criminology, and digital media analysis, this project investigates emotional and informational mechanisms across online communities to understand victimhood identities, grievance, resilience, and how societies can resist radicalising and polarisation narratives in digital spaces.