Society’s Grant Scheme continues to support innovative Welsh projects
The ongoing success and importance of our Research Grant Scheme is evident in the eight new projects that have received funding in the latest application round.
This year we are awarding grants that meet any of the following conditions:
- Wales Studies
- Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
- Early Career Researcher (any discipline) as project leader
We attracted bids from six of Wales’ universities.
“We’re delighted with the ongoing success of the Grant Scheme,” said Dr Barbara Ibinarriaga Soltero, our Programme Manager for Researcher Development.
“It has become an important part of Wales’ research landscape and we’re starting to see its effect in terms of generating successful long-term research projects.
“For example, researchers at Wrexham University who received one of our grants last year have used that to secure a £15,000 grant from the Adverse Childhood Experiences Hub Wales for their project ‘Police Peer Supervision to Support Wellbeing’.
“This is precisely why we established our grant scheme and it is so encouraging to see it starting to bear fruit in this way.”
The eight projects we have funded in this latest round are:
Empowering places: interdisciplinary approaches to community-focused education | Dr Tom Avery | Swansea University |
Regenerative tourism in Bridgend through grassroots engagement | Dr Karen Davies | Cardiff Metropolitan University |
Empowering young people in research | Dr Michaela James | Swansea University |
Support for neurodivergent staff working in UK higher education | Dr Emma Harrison | Wrexham University |
Community schools in Wales: conceptual understanding, current deployment, and future development | Lisa Formby | Wrexham University |
Strengthening research collaboration and community in arts and humanities across Wales and Scotland | Professor Kirsti Bohata | Swansea University |
Representation of older people in Welsh-language TV drama workshops | Dr Aelwyn Williams / Dr Elain Price | Swansea University |
Citizen science in the community: co-production of a programme to support the engagement of people living in deprived areas to gain insight into physical inactivity and health inequalities | Dr Zsofia Szekeres | Cardiff Metropolitan University |