<![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> /about/news/ en Sat, 20 Dec 2025 21:59:57 +0100 Fri, 19 Dec 2025 17:20:57 +0100 <![CDATA[Newsroom University of Manchester]]> https://content.presspage.com/clients/150_1369.jpg /about/news/ 144 International Recognition for Innovative Assessment Research /about/news/international-recognition-for-innovative-assessment-research/ /about/news/international-recognition-for-innovative-assessment-research/732060Dr ’s work on rethinking assessment through choice and purpose has gained national and international recognition, including coverage in Higher Education Digest and invitations to deliver keynotes and panels for Advance HE, the World Conference on Research in Teaching & Education, and Universities UK this autumn.

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Dr Miri Firth’s pioneering work on rethinking assessment through choice and purpose continues to shape national and international conversations on assessment design. On 22 October, Higher Education Digest featured her research on optionality in assessment, exploring how flexibility and purpose-driven assessment can improve student engagement, wellbeing, and achievement.

In November, Dr Firth will share this work across a series of prestigious events: as a keynote speaker at the Advance HE Assessment and Feedback Symposium (4 November); a keynote at the World Conference on Research in Teaching & Education (16 November); and as an invited panel member for Universities UK’s national event on Access, Participation and Student Success (20 November).

Together, these invitations highlight both the relevance and the impact of her research, which has already influenced assessment practice in more than a dozen universities. Her continued leadership demonstrates the Faculty of Humanities’ contribution to transforming assessment and enhancing the student learning experience across the higher education sector.

Evidence of sector use of this work to date : 

  • University of Liverpool&Բ;—&Բ;Formal Flexible Assessment Guidance and Code of Practice define flexible assessment and parity/equivalency expectations. 
  • Sheffield Hallam University — Public guidance on Assessment Choice (students choose questions/methods; emphasis on inclusivity and parity). 
  • University of Glasgow&Բ;—&Բ;Flexible Submission Guidance adopted institutionally; reported reductions in extensionsand improved manageability. 
  • Teesside University — LTE guidance on Flexible / Hybrid Assessment (choice and authentic formats aligned to hybrid delivery). 
  • Loughborough University — Case study on student choice of assessment format (poster, vlog, infographic, etc.) to remove barriers. 
  • University of Sussex — Case study on introducing optionality for accessibility and inclusion (student reflections). 
  • University of Northampton&Բ;—&Բ;Assessment snapshot: optionality embedded and signposted across a programme to build assessment literacy. 
  • University of York — Institutional workstream on assessment optionality; staff resources and funded projects exploring subject-specific cases. 
  • UCL — Digital Assessment Team blog series on optionality, reflecting work with Manchester, York and Imperial in the QAA project. 
  • Liverpool John Moores University (LJMU) — Policy/guidance updates and staff hub referencing flexible assessment practice (plus public comms on assessment reform). 
  • Newcastle University — Curriculum framework and learning-and-teaching resources highlight programme-level assessment design aligned with inclusive/flexible practice. 

Sector-level foundation / cross-institutional reference

  • QAA Collaborative Enhancement Project – Optionality in Assessment (Firth et al., 2023): report and resources underpinning many of the above adoptions. 
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2025's news highlights from the Faculty of Humanities /about/news/highlights-from-the-faculty-of-humanities/ /about/news/highlights-from-the-faculty-of-humanities/7319042025 has been another great year for Vlogٷ's Faculty of Humanities, and has again seen some significant achievements and initiatives. Here are some of the key highlights:

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2025 has been another great year for Vlogٷ's Faculty of Humanities, and has again seen some significant achievements and initiatives. Here are some of the key highlights:

January

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The year started with research from Professor Jamie Woodward which revealed that England’s major water and sewage companies are misleading the public and Government by using strategies which mirror those of the tobacco and fossil fuel industries. His study uncovered widespread use of greenwashing and disinformation tactics by England’s nine major water and sewage companies, and was covered extensively in the national media.

January also saw the launch of a major new study to assess the impact of smartphones and social media on young people, and research which found that vast areas of the UK’s peatlands are under threat due to climate change. It also brought the news that Vlogٷ ranks in the top 50 globally for Social Sciences, Business Economics, Engineering, Arts & Humanities and Medical & Health.

February

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In February, one of the world’s largest school-based trials found that an intervention to help students normalise their everyday emotions is the ‘most promising’ of several approaches for supporting mental health in children and young people. The Education for Wellbeing trial involved 32,655 students in 513 English primary and secondary schools, testing five interventions.

Research launched in February also found that polling in Ukraine contradicted Donald Trump, who claimed that Volodymyr Zelensky’s approval rating stood at 4% - the study put his approval rating at 63%, making him the most popular politician in the country. This story received widespread media coverage.

March

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Internationally acclaimed novelist and short story writer Sarah Hall joined Vlogٷ in March as a Professor of Creative Writing. Sarah joined a prestigious teaching team at the University’s Centre for New Writing made up of novelists, poets, screenwriters, playwrights and non-fiction writers, including Jeanette Winterson, Ian McGuire, Jason Allen-Paisant, Beth Underdown, Horatio Clare, Tim Price and John McAuliffe.

Also during this month, experts called on the government to make urgent changes to the UK’s bus network in an appearance at a Transport Select Committee inquiry. The group – including Professor Karen Lucas, Head of the Transport and Mobilities Group at Vlogٷ – spoke about the detrimental impact of poor bus connectivity and the need for immediate government action. A new research centre was also launched to promote socially just, people-centred sustainability transformations by collaborating with communities, governments and businesses to develop low-carbon living initiatives.

April

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In April, The Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) - the UK’s largest funder of economic, social, behavioural and human data science - appointed Manchester’s Professor Cecilia Wong as a member of its Council. Professor Wong brought a wealth of expertise and an exceptional track record to her role - her extensive research encompasses strategic spatial planning, policy monitoring & analysis, urban & regional development and housing & infrastructure planning. ​

The month also saw the launch of a new report from , which has surveyed 130,000 young people since 2021, which highlighted the experiences of pupils in mainstream schools with Special Educational Needs (SEN). The study found that across a range of headline metrics – mental wellbeing, life satisfaction, self-esteem and emotional difficulties – young people with SEN experience worse outcomes.  

May

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May saw the launch of a major new partnership with the Bank of England which will see existing teachers offered free training to deliver A Level economics alongside their core subject. The three-year programme, which will be piloted in the North West before eventually being rolled out across the UK, aims to make the subject more accessible to students from a wider range of backgrounds.

Also in May, the Government announced changes to the Winter Fuel Payment after being presented with research from Vlogٷ which found that their plans were going to leave many more older people in poverty, putting their health and wellbeing at risk. The month also saw Manchester being officially recognised as one of the UK’s new Policing Academic Centres of Excellence (PACE), as part of a national initiative to embed world-class research into frontline policing and community safety.

June

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June brought two major archaeology stories - firstly, experts from Manchester played a leading role in the rediscovery of the ancient city of Imet in Egypt’s eastern Nile Delta, uncovering multi-storey dwellings, granaries and a ceremonial road tied to the worship of the cobra goddess Wadjet. This story received widespread coverage. The month brought news of a new project to explore the discovery of Wales’ first complete ancient chariot.

The same month also saw the launch of two reports into children's mental health - one found that while teens from disadvantaged neighbourhoods do face lower life satisfaction, they don't actually face more emotional problems. The other found that physical activity is critical for children's happiness.

July

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July brought the extremely sad news that Lord David Alliance CBE had passed away. Lord Alliance’s belief in the power of philanthropy, education and research to drive positive change inspired generations of students, staff, alumni and partners. The renaming of Manchester Business School to Alliance Manchester Business School in 2015 stands as a testament to Lord Alliance’s transformative impact and support for Vlogٷ and its students over many years.

The month also saw Alliance Manchester Business School's Professor Timothy Michael Devinney being elected as a Fellow of the British Academy, the UK’s leading national body for the humanities and social sciences.

Also during this month, several Humanities academics were leading policy conversations about major issues - including Professor Jamie Woodward who spoke at Westminster about the impact of microplastic pollution on our environment, and Professor Pamela Qualter who co-authored a World Health Organization (WHO) report calling for urgent action to tackle loneliness and social disconnection around the world.

August

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During August, an historian from Vlogٷ was named as one of six authors shortlisted for the 2025 Royal Society Trivedi Science Book Prize, which celebrates the best popular science writing from across the globe. Vanished: An Unnatural History of Extinction by Professor Sadiah Qureshi was named as one of the finalists at the Edinburgh International Book Festival.

Two leading criminologists from Vlogٷ also joined a groundbreaking national research project designed to tackle fraud in the NHS, which costs the UK taxpayer an estimated £1.3 billion each year. 

There was also media interest in a study which found that a single sheet of 1,100-year-old parchment may have been used to heal a dangerous royal rift in Ancient England.

September

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The start of the new academic year was marked by the appointment of three academics from Vlogٷ as Fellows of the Academy of Social Sciences. Professor Liz Richardson, Professor David Richards and Professor Anupam Nanda were named in recognition of their excellence and impact, and their advancement of social sciences for the public good. 

The month also saw Vlogٷ being appointed as the UN's Academic Impact Vice-Chair for SDG10 research, meaning the University will play an essential role in advancing the implementation of the UN's 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Some major research was also launched in August which found that Levelling Up’ left many southern areas behind, a mentoring programme was giving a big mental health boost to LGBTQIA+ teens, and cities needing to do more to support older people who want to stay in their own homes as they age.

October

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October saw three major pieces of research into schools - studies were published into school isolation rooms damaging pupil wellbeing, a third of new teachers quitting within five years of qualifying and the discovery of a significant and lasting link between the subjects young people study in school and their political preferences. 

Also during October, a study was launched by Dr Louise Thompson which found that outdated rules in the House of Commons shut smaller parties out of key decisions, leaving millions of voters effectively unheard. This led to several of those parties - including the SNP, Plaid Cymru and Reform - raising the issue, as well as media coverage across the UK. 

November

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The University’s Professor Hilary Pilkington was one of the authors of the final report of the Independent Commission on Counter-Terrorism Law, Policy and Practice,  which in November called for a comprehensive overhaul of the UK's counter-terrorism policies. This received widespread media coverage across the country.

The University also launched new research as part of the N8 Child of the North campaign in November, which found that the post-Covid school attendance crisis is hitting disadvantaged children hardest - the story led to regional and national media coverage.

The month also saw studies into Buddhism in mental health care, stronger communities being linked to better health, and the rise of ‘authoritarian peacemaking’ and its implications for Ukraine. 

December

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The final month of the year saw the launch of a major new collaboration with the University of Oxford which will bring together an expert team of textual scholars, book historians, computer scientists, library data experts and research software engineers to explore whether computers ‘see’ books and prints the same way as people do, and asks whether the AI algorithm can be made to see in the same way as humans. 

A major global study led by Dr Francesco Rampazzo also found that younger generations around the world are embracing a more diverse and fluid understanding of sexual identity than ever before. The research - which analysed data from over 900,000 users of the queer women’s and nonbinary dating app Zoe - offered one of the first truly global pictures of how people identify their sexuality in 122 countries, from the UK and the US to Brazil, South Africa and Taiwan.

These stories reflect the Faculty's commitment to addressing global challenges through its research, education and social responsibility.

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Justice Hub wins ‘Educational Institution of the Year’ award /about/news/justice-hub-wins-educational-institution-of-the-year-award/ /about/news/justice-hub-wins-educational-institution-of-the-year-award/732017The Justice Hub at the University of Manchester Law School has won ‘Educational Institution of the Year 2025’ for providing legal support to those unable to access legal aid, helping to close the justice gap and transform lives across Greater Manchester.The  at the  has won ‘Educational Institution of the Year 2025’ at the recent Greater Manchester Pro Bono Awards.  Through partnerships with students from across the , academics, lawyers and local charities, the Hub delivers free legal support to those most in need.

Around 650,000 people in the region fall into the ‘justice gap’ because they cannot access legal aid or afford private representation.

The Justice Hub’s important work exposes lawyers of the future to the injustices faced by many and the importance of access to justice and helps to transform lives across Greater Manchester. 

The Awards, now in their second year, celebrate the regions’ lawyers, law students and legal professionals who are transforming lives through free legal advice and representation. 

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Hidden bias gives ‘swing state’ voters more influence over US trade policy /about/news/more-influence-over-us-trade-policy/ /about/news/more-influence-over-us-trade-policy/731928Americans living in political “swing states” have a significantly louder voice in national trade policy - effectively making their votes worth more than others - according to a new study published in the .

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Americans living in political “swing states” have a significantly louder voice in national trade policy - effectively making their votes worth more than others - according to a new study published in the .

Professor Karim Chalak from Vlogٷ, Professor John McLaren from the University of Virginia and Professor Xiangjun Ma from Liaoning University found that US governments of both parties tend to shape their trade policies to favour industries based in states that could decide presidential elections.

Using decades of economic and political data - from the Clinton years through to the Trump trade wars - the team found that US tariffs are consistently biased toward industries located in swing states such as Florida, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. 

According to their estimates, the welfare of a voter in a non-swing state is treated as being worth just 82 percent of that of a voter in a swing state when national trade decisions are made.

“Our research reveals the extent to which US policymakers cater to the welfare of swing-state workers relative to others with similar jobs elsewhere,” explains Professor Chalak. “This bias is a byproduct of the US’s electoral system - economic policies are shaped partly by political geography.”

The researchers describe how this pattern was illustrated clearly in the 1990s, when the Clinton administration negotiated special tomato trade protections for Florida ahead of a tight election. Similar patterns reappeared during later trade disputes involving steel and manufacturing tariffs.

“People often claim that the Electoral College protects small states, but the evidence is that it just penalizes people for not living in a swing state,” said Professor McLaren, “and even for swing states, the best evidence is that small states do not benefit from the bias.” 

By combining theoretical modelling with real-world data on tariffs, industries, and voting patterns, the team developed what they call the “Swing-State Theorem.” The theorem predicts that in majoritarian systems like the US, policy naturally tilts toward the interests of swing regions - even without explicit lobbying.

The findings shed light on how political incentives can distort economic policy in ways that are both inefficient and hard to justify as fair, and they may help to explain why trade wars and protectionist measures often appear inconsistent with broader national welfare. The authors suggest the same logic could apply to other areas of policy, from infrastructure spending to defence contracts.

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Exhibition celebrates works of Manchester City Architect’s Department /about/news/manchester-city-architects-department/ /about/news/manchester-city-architects-department/731898A new landmark exhibition has opened in the first floor gallery of Manchester Central Library which celebrates the contribution that the City Architects made to Manchester and its citizens over the 101 years of the Department. 

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A new landmark exhibition has opened in the first floor gallery of Manchester Central Library which celebrates the contribution that the City Architects made to Manchester and its citizens over the 101 years of the Department. 

The first City Architect, Henry Price, was appointed in 1902 – between then and 2003, only six others held the prestigious post. Price oversaw the design and construction of many of the city’s wash houses and baths, including the Grade II* listed Victoria Baths of 1906 on Hathersage Road. 

It is worth remembering how much of the city’s operations were governed from the town hall. Manchester Corporation once controlled gas and electricity undertakings, tramways and trolleybuses, schools, police, fire and ambulance services, waste collection, parks and recreation, housing, libraries and more. The City Architect’s Department designed for all of these. 

Over 350 images of plans, adverts, brochures, press clippings official and amateur photography, are on display and show the incredible breadth of the Departments influence, as well as their geographic reach. The exhibition focuses on the city and its suburbs, not just the centre. 

Much of the show features buildings constructed between 1945 and 1974 – the end of the Second World War and the creation of Greater Manchester Council – and illustrates the incredible transformation of the city in that period. 

Celebrated schemes, like the restoration of the Free Trade Hall in the 1950s, sit alongside more macabre utilitarian buildings, such as the City Mortuary, reminding us of the things a city needs to function. 

The latter days of the Department were characterised by the upkeep of existing estate, libraries, schools and housing, and renewed attention on the public realm – the creation of Castlefield Urban Heritage Park, the pedestrianisation of Market Street, pocket parks along the River Irwell and in China Town. 

Finally, as commissions increasingly fell to the private sector, the City Architect became an instrumental figure in the stewarding of large investments that saw Olympic bids and the delivery of the Commonwealth Games. 

"This exhibition celebrates the work of City Architects who made their mark on the city skyscape and its suburbs from 1903," said Councillor John Hacking, Executive Member for Skills, Employment and Leisure. “It is a fascinating look back at how instrumental they were in shaping the city and showcases their vision in making Manchester the city that we live in today.”

“It is easy to forget the wonderful, weird and sometimes straightforward contributions that local authority architects made to the city and the lives they shaped,” said Professor Richard Brook from Lancaster University. "To get this research out in public and in partnership with Archives+ hopefully casts new light on the city and the collections.” 

The exhibition runs until 28 February 2026. The curators, Dr Martin Dodge and Professor Richard Brook, have created a dynamic composition to which they will continually add material during its run.

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Researchers awarded funding from Schmidt Sciences for 'Envisioning Print with AI Computer Vision' project /about/news/envisioning-print-with-ai/ /about/news/envisioning-print-with-ai/731538The Envisioning Print project brings together an expert team of textual scholars, book historians, computer scientists, library data experts, and research software engineers from the University of Manchester and Oxford to address new research questions in AI computer vision via novel interdisciplinary research approaches. 

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The project aims to teach computers to identify differences between examples of early printed documents and artworks, that is, to be able to discover minute instances of difference in otherwise-identical prints from the same printing surface. It explores whether computers ‘see’ books and prints the same way as people do, and asks whether the algorithm sees (or indeed, can see, or can be made to see) the same way as humans. 

The researchers aim to develop AI tools that can understand the differences between multiple versions of prints throughout history, allowing scholars to understand how early imagery was made and circulated, along with the practices of printers and their workshops. 

The team consists of (Professor of Italian and Director of the John Rylands Research Institute at the University of Manchester);  (Professor of Computer Science and Head of Engineering Research at the University of Manchester); (Head of the Digital Development Team at the University of Manchester Library);  (Senior Software Developer in the University of Manchester Library’s Digital Development Team); (Senior Researcher in Digital Humanities at the University of Oxford); (Royal Society Research Professor and Professor of Computer Vision Engineering at the University of Oxford); and (Software Engineer at the University of Oxford).

Professor Richard Curry, Vice-Dean for Research and Innovation in the University's Faculty of Science and Engineering, said: "It's fantastic news that the Manchester-led project Envisioning Print with AI Computer Vision, has been selected for this Schmidt Sciences award. This project is an exemplary, highly interdisciplinary collaboration between humanities researchers and computational experts, and its cutting-edge mixed methodologies will shape future innovation  with real-world impacts in line with the University's Manchester 2035 ambitions."

Wendy Schmidt, co-founder of Schmidt Sciences, added: “Our newest technologies may shed light on our oldest truths, on all that makes us human – from the origins of civilization to the peaks of philosophical thought to contemporary art and film, Schmidt Sciences’ Humanities and AI Virtual Institute (HAVI) is poised to change not only the course of scholarship, but also the way we see ourselves and our role in the world.”

Schmidt Sciences has awarded $11 million to 23 research teams around the world who are exploring new ways to bring artificial intelligence into dialogue with the humanities, from archaeology and art history to literature, linguistics, film studies, and beyond. As part of the Humanities and AI Virtual Institute (HAVI), these interdisciplinary teams will both apply AI to illuminate the human record and draw on humanistic questions, methods, and values to advance how AI itself is designed and used.

Schmidt Sciences is a nonprofit organisation founded in 2024 by Eric and Wendy Schmidt that works to accelerate scientific knowledge and breakthroughs with the most promising, advanced tools to support a thriving planet. The organisation prioritises research in areas poised for impact, including AI and advanced computing, astrophysics, biosciences, climate, and space – as well as supporting researchers in a variety of disciplines through its science systems program.

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First global study finds young people redefining sexuality around the world /about/news/young-people-redefining-sexuality-around-the-world/ /about/news/young-people-redefining-sexuality-around-the-world/731347A major new global study led by a researcher at Vlogٷ has found that younger generations around the world are embracing a more diverse and fluid understanding of sexual identity than ever before.

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A major new global study led by a researcher at Vlogٷ has found that younger generations around the world are embracing a more diverse and fluid understanding of sexual identity than ever before.

The research - which analysed data from over 900,000 users of the queer women’s and nonbinary dating app Zoe - offers one of the first truly global pictures of how people identify their sexuality in 122 countries, from the UK and the US to Brazil, South Africa and Taiwan.

The study, published in , found that lesbian and bisexual are the most common identities - but it also shows that younger users are far more likely to describe themselves using newer or broader terms such as queer, pansexual or asexual, suggesting that traditional labels are evolving rapidly.

“Younger generations are showing us that sexuality is not a fixed category - it’s a spectrum,” said Dr Francesco Rampazzo, lead author and Lecturer in Social Statistics at Vlogٷ. “Across the world, more young people are comfortable describing their identities in diverse and fluid ways.”

The research highlights how openness about sexuality often depends on cultural and social context. Countries in Europe, North America and Oceania show the greatest diversity of identities, while users in some parts of Africa and Asia were less likely to share information about their sexuality - likely reflecting differences in social acceptance or legal protection.

“Where people feel safe, they are more likely to express who they really are,” said Dr Canton Winer, co-author from the Northern Illinois University. “In places where LGBTQ+ identities remain stigmatised or even criminalised, that freedom is much narrower.”

The team emphasises that the study is not just about numbers - it’s about visibility. Behind each data point is a real person choosing to be seen.

The findings also show a small but visible proportion of users identifying as asexual, an often-overlooked orientation that’s now appearing beyond Western contexts. This hints at a growing global recognition of lesser-known identities.

By working directly with Zoe, which shared anonymised, aggregated data for research, the study marks a new frontier in demographic research. Rather than relying only on national surveys - which often miss sexual minorities - digital data from dating apps can help paint a more inclusive global picture.

“At Zoe, we have always believed that responsible collaboration between industry and academia can produce insights that genuinely benefit LGBTQ+ communities,” said Milan Kovacic, the former CEO of Zoe. “Studies like this show how data, when handled with care and respect, can deepen our understanding of people’s experiences and help create safer, more inclusive digital spaces. We are proud to support research that contributes to that goal.”

The study was conducted by researchers from Vlogٷ, Northern Illinois University and the Zoe App, and is part of ongoing efforts to build a more global understanding of LGBTQ+ identities.

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Humanities Academics Celebrate Business Engagement Success at inaugural event /about/news/humanities-academics-celebrate-business-engagement-success-at-inaugural-event/ /about/news/humanities-academics-celebrate-business-engagement-success-at-inaugural-event/731189Academics and business engagement colleagues gathered on Tuesday 9 December to celebrate business engagement and knowledge exchange success across the Faculty of Humanities. The Faculty was the first to embed business engagement & Knowledge Exchange into its overall strategy , launching its first Business Engagement strategy in 2015.  

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Opening the event was Dr Louise Bates, Director of Business Engagement and Knowledge Exchange for the University of Manchester who highlighted the depth and breadth of the collaborative partnership work undertaken by academics from across the University and how her team supports academic colleagues in establishing such partnerships. Vice Dean for Research, Professor Maggie Gale welcomed guests and highlighted the breadth of expertise and collaborative innovation taking place across the faculty within key areas including AI, climate resilience and sustainability, legal and social justice including investigating racial bias on the bench, age-friendly communities, and supply chain innovation. 

Associate Dean for Business Engagement, Civic & Cultural Partnerships , Professor Richard Allmendinger introduced the nominees from each school.

The winners, announced by Maggie Gale, were: 

Alliance Manchester Business School 

  • Prof Jian-Bo Yang & Prof Dong‑Ling Xu, for their KTP with Kennedys to develop and embed an intelligent data driven fraud prevention and detection service for insurance claim handling, utilising modern machine learning, text analytics and semantic technologies. 

School of Arts, Languages and Cultures 

  • Prof Eithne Quinn, for work on racial bias in the judicial system enabled through a Simon Industrial & Professional Fellowship project undertaken by Keir Monteith KC, which  has received significant media coverage and follow-on projects in related areas. 

School of Social Sciences 

  • Prof Emma Barrett for a Simon Industrial & Professional Fellowship with Limina Immersive “Building a safer Metaverse: Exploring the challenges faced by industry in developing safe, secure and ethical immersive experiences”.  The project supported a successful £80K SPRITE+ funding bid for a deep dive expected to result in a step change in our industry engagement around XR and fostered new cross-disciplinary and external collaborations. 

School of Environment, Education & Development 

  • Dr Emma Shuttleworth For collaborating with key stakeholders, including the Environment Agency, Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and Groundwork Greater Manchester, to lead KTPs that have developed a data-driven framework for innovative sustainable water management in the Irwell catchment and optimised the long-term financial health of the Groundwork Trust. 

At the end of the Awards ceremony Richard Allmendinger announced the launch of a seed-funding call for academics across the faculty to submit bids for up to £7k to support early-stage development of collaborative projects with partners. Full information on the call available .

The full list of nominated projects: 

Alliance Manchester Business School 

  • Dr Arijit De, Associate Professor in Management Science  For his work in establishing Maritime Engineering and Management as a new cluster theme at UoM, including work with Port of Dover, DFDS, Ship & Bunker, Sealand and Smart Green Shipping building a substantial portfolio of research in maritime, port, and freight logistics with these partners, a REF Impact Case Study in freight and maritime logistics is in development.
  • Prof Yu-wang Chen, Professor of Decision Sciences and Business Analytics  KTP – - the largest KTP awarded by Innovate UK.
  • Dr Pedro Sampaio, Senior Lecturer in Information Systems  KTP – - to design, develop and embed an Industry 4.0 inspired data driven business model and management information framework which will support the company's strategic vision of expansion.
  • Prof David Hughes, Professor of Personality and Organisational Psychology & Nadia Papamichail, Professor of Decision Systems & Management Sciences  KTP - to create sustainable growth and productivity improvement by combining behavioural psychology profiling and emotional regulation with advanced data science techniques to tackle complex work processes and transform the way JLG engages, supports its clients and staff through the legal frameworks. DH was shortlisted for Academic of the Year at the 2025 KTP Awards.
  • Prof Brian Nicholson, Professor of Business Information Systems & Dr Sung Hwan Chai, Lecturer in Accounting KTP: - To develop, embed and exploit advanced smart data driven technologies to deliver digital transformation within the audit function significantly increasing quality, productivity and capacity to deliver additional insight and value to clients.
  • Prof Judy Zolkiewski, Professor of Marketing  KTP projects - . To create a smarter business that is both client-driven whilst also enhancing improved employee interactions, within a unified customer-centric framework that can support product and service innovation.
  • Prof Jian-Bo Yang, Professor of Decision and System Sciences & Prof Ling (Dong‑Ling) Xu, Chair Professor of Decision Science and Systems  KTP - AMBS & Kennedys to develop and embed an i and detection service to support insurance claim handling utilising modern machine learning, text analytics techniques and semantic technologies, that can shape and add value to business. 

 

School of Arts, Languages and Cultures  

  • Prof Eithne Quinn, Professor of Cultural and Socio‑legal Studies  For work on racial bias in the judicial system enabled through a undertaken by Keir Monteith KC which has received significant media coverage and led to a follow-on project on mis-use of lyrics in rap music in criminal court cases.
  • Prof Steve Scott-Bottoms, Professor of Contemporary Theatre and Performance - Finding the Story ARC: Engaging businesses with climate resilience in Yorkshire’s Aire valley  IAA 496 Advance - The Rivalry Project: Extending Stakeholder Engagement with Climate Resilience in the Catchment of the Aire
  • Dr Kostas Arvanitis, Senior Lecturer in Museology  - Therapeutic Impact of Physical, Digital and Virtual Collections of Trauma.
  • Dr Kostas Arvanitis, Senior Lecturer in Museology & Dr Andy Hardman, Senior Lecturer in Creative and Cultural Practices  KTP - SALC & Port Sunlight Village Trust - creating and embedding a framework and tool-kit underpinned by museological and critical heritage research to transform the ways in which PSVT manages and interprets its history, site and collections.
  • Prof Sasha Handley, Professor of Early Modern History  Salford Community Leisure - - Sleeping Well Salford: Using Historic Sleep Practices to Support Health and Social Care Pathways. 

 

School of Environment, Education & Development 

  • Dr Emma Shuttleworth, Senior Lecturer in Physical Geography  Working collaboratively with a number of key stakeholders on environmental sustainability projects including Environment Agency, and leading on KTPs with Yorkshire Wildlife Trust and Groundwork Trust to create and embed a data driven catchment management framework that will drive innovative evidence-based sustainable water management within the Irwell catchment and optimise long-term financial health for Groundwork Greater Manchester.
  • Dr Sophie van Huellen, Senior Lecturer in Development Economics   - Why Ghanaian farmers have been unable to capitalise on record cocoa prices with Fuad Mohammed Abubakar, Managing Head of the Ghana Cocoa Marketing Company (UK) Ltd.
  • Dr Joanne Tippett, Lecturer in Spatial Planning  Manchester UNESCO Creative City of Literature IAA 425 Secondment - Imagining sustainable futures: self-facilitated learning from heritage through art and play in UNESCO-designated sites. Shortlisted for ‘Transformative Social Venture of the Year’ award at the KEUK Awards 2024. 

“The RoundView is a powerful way to activate and build capacity in UNESCO’s core competencies for sustainability leadership”. James Ömer Bridge, Secretary-General of UNESCO UK. 

“The Secondment demonstrated that the RoundView learning toolkit offers great promise to address a key challenge we experience as UNESCO sites, of linking our work to sustainable development… and enabling us to translate SDG 13 Climate Action into an accessible activity. A key finding from the Secondment was that the ‘poetry as pedagogy’ incorporated into the toolkit helps encourage sustainability learning through literature, a key need for both us as Cities of Literature and our library partners.” Ivan Wadeson, Executive Director of Manchester UNESCO City of Literature.

  • Dr Nuno Pinto, Senior Lecturer in Urban Planning and Urban Design  For demonstrating exceptional leadership and innovation through the establishment and continued development of the MSc Data Science student industry-project programme. His dedication has transformed the initiative into a thriving platform for student engagement and real-world impact, with its success growing year on year. Nuno’s commitment to expanding the programme is evident in his active collaboration with fellow academics, fostering the creation of similar opportunities across other schools. His work exemplifies the spirit of business engagement and makes him a worthy nominee for the Faculty of Humanities Business Engagement award.
  • Prof Sarah Marie Hall, Professor in Human Geography  with Manchester Central Foodbank  IAA 468 Relationship Development - Developing community-led, anti-poverty research capacity.  IAA 503 Proof of Concept - Developing Manchester’s Anti-Poverty Research Community: Co-Producing Grassroots Collaborations for Positive Social Change. Winner of UoM in the Outstanding public engagement initiative: Local/civic engagement category
  • Prof Nicola Banks, Professor of Global Development   - Activating citizen philanthropy for community-centred social justice: piloting a One World Together Global Citizenship curriculum for secondary schools.
  • Prof Alison Browne, Professor of Geography   - the project brings together data analytics and social science insights to develop a Water Practices Analytical Toolkit for use in the water industry, offering a unique approach for managing the sustainability of water and influencing the UK’s long-term usage, average and peak water demands. 

School of Social Sciences 

  • Prof Tine Buffel, Professor of Sociology and Social Gerontology  Age Friendly Manchester (Manchester City Council)  IAA 401 Secondment - Developing age-friendly communities to support healthy ageing: Exploring the potential of a policy innovation partnership between public agencies and faith-based organisations in Greater Manchester.
  • Prof Emma Barrett, Professor of Psychology, Security and Trust  Simon Industrial & Professional Fellowship with Limina Immersive “Building a safer Metaverse: Exploring the challenges faced by industry in developing safe, secure and ethical immersive experiences”.  The SIF project supported a successful £80K SPRITE+ funding bid for a deep dive expected to result in a step change in our industry engagement around XR and fostered new cross-disciplinary and external collaborations. The work also informed EB’s presentation at the Home Office Digital Forensics Conference in June 2025, alongside Innovate UK. 
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Thu, 11 Dec 2025 12:09:18 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6f87ffed-4203-43fa-ab32-60f5db59405c/500_02.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6f87ffed-4203-43fa-ab32-60f5db59405c/02.jpg?10000
You Ought To Know: Simon Industrial Fellow Karen Gabay releases podcast series about Black British music histories /about/news/you-ought-to-know-simon-industrial-fellow-karen-gabay-releases-podcast-series-about-black-british-music-histories/ /about/news/you-ought-to-know-simon-industrial-fellow-karen-gabay-releases-podcast-series-about-black-british-music-histories/730753The Fellowship ‘This is our Story – Reclaiming Black British music’s his- and herstories’ builds on Karen’s experience working in broadcast media including the BBC and ITV, and as an independent filmmaker, to document the lived experiences of those working within the Black British and Manchester music scenes. 

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From January to July 2025 broadcaster and producer  carried out research as part of a Simon Industrial Fellowship with the  and the   at Vlogٷ.  

As part of the fellowship Karen Gabay produced a podcast series entitled ‘You Ought To Know’ that will be published across various platforms, with the first episode premiering on 14 January 2026. Each podcast captures a conversation with musicians that have had and continue to have a significant impact on British popular music. These conversations were recorded at public engagement events as well as in intimate one-on-one settings across Manchester. 

You can listen to and watch the podcast episodes on various platforms. To be notified of new episodes subscribe to Karen Gabay’s  and the School of Arts, Languages and Cultures’  channel. 

The first podcast is a recording of Karen Gabay’s panel event on Reggae and Dub-Poetry in the UK with Lovers Rock legend , Dub Poetry great  and Reggae and Hip Hop artist  in the Manchester Museum in June 2025. This episode will be released on 14 January 2026. 

The second episode explores the history of Black British Gospel Music and was recorded in  in Deansgate in May 2025. Manchester musician , gospel pioneer , Mancunian vocalist  and Kingdom Choir member and founder of Manchester Inspirational Voices  star in this episode to be released on 21 January 2026. 

The third podcast episode features a conversation with renowned Soul singer-songwriter and former Ikette  known for her work with Paul Weller, Peter Gabriel, and Jimmy Cliff. The recording took place across three sessions at Vlogٷ and , the iconic home of Granada Television in July 2025. This episode will be released on 28 January 2026. 

The final episode of this series is scheduled to be released in February 2026. Recorded in July 2025 it explores how Manchester singer-songwriter  alternative soul and R&B sound is influenced by Black British musicians and led him to pursue collaborations with soul great Jill Scott and UK artist Marsha Ambrosius of Floetry.

These episodes form the beginning of a series of conversations around the unsung legends and influential artists in the UK music industry. Future episodes will be released on Karen Gabay’s channels in the coming months. This bonus content includes in-depth conversations with the Queen of Northern Soul  (Tainted Love) and earlier podcast guests Sylvia Tella and Luke Smith on their lives and work in the Black British music industry. It also features an intimate one-on-one discussion with  who is considered a musician’s favourite and trailblazer in redefining Soul for British audiences. 

Throughout her fellowship, Karen was able to build on her interest in uncovering and showcasing forgotten artefacts of Black music history and gained access the  in the  for further archival research. This allowed her to amplify the voices of those working within the UK music sector, in particular Black vocalists, and industry professionals, who have heavily impacted popular music in the UK and globally. She explored how different cultural spaces in Manchester have played a significant role in the lives of these musicians and their path in the music industry over the decades. 

Secondary outputs of the project include Karen Gabay’s reading list and a playlist providing the musical soundtrack for exploring the recent past and present of Black British music and its influences, which can be accessed 

This Simon Industrial Fellowship laid the foundations for documenting alternative music histories in the UK. It explored and applied ethical and collaborative methods of archiving personal stories of a demographic, who have suffered from experiences of institutional exclusion, absence of fair accreditation and missing commercial opportunities due to their race or geographical location. It is taking steps towards righting wrongs of the recent past and gives talented but previously overlooked creatives a platform to tell their stories on their own terms. 

As such it reasserts the relevance and significance of the John Rylands’ British Pop Archive and is adding more diverse and nonetheless equally relevant archival artefacts to its catalogue. This work aligns with the University’s renewed strategic focus on archives and just archival practices to celebrate, document and bring to the fore the stories that make Manchester the city we know today. 

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Through the years what is deemed as pop music shifts and changes. Commercial appeal and money-making have squeezed certain popular forms out of the so-called mainstream channels – this has not stopped the music from being loved and being played in homes, clubs, and on laptops.]]> Karen Gabay has, for years, been bringing news of important stories from the Black British music industry as part of her work as journalist, producer, and broadcaster. We are delighted that we could host Karen for her Simon Industrial Fellowship and support her crucial research with the John Rylands Library and British Pop Archive. Over the past year, we have seen Karen, some of her amazing contacts in the industry and colleagues here work together to further document and shine a light on the stories of musicians and industry professionals so integral to the music we know and love! We are keen now to see where our collaboration might take us in the future]]> Mon, 08 Dec 2025 15:44:05 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5d60aaa3-7fb1-4c9d-b116-56d8441d7867/500_podcastseriescoveryououghttoknowdesktopwallpaper.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5d60aaa3-7fb1-4c9d-b116-56d8441d7867/podcastseriescoveryououghttoknowdesktopwallpaper.png?10000
The Digital Environment Conference 2026: Open Call /about/news/the-digital-environment-conference-2026-open-call/ /about/news/the-digital-environment-conference-2026-open-call/730681Open call for presentations and poster submissions. is excited to announce that the presentation and poster submission is now live for !

Interested in presenting your work at The Digital Environment Conference 2026, hosted at SISTER on 1st April 2026? We are looking for individuals to present their research in 15 minute speakers slots, or present their work on a poster board at the event.

Please email Jade at digitalfutures@manchester.ac.uk with your presentation and/ or poster title, and topic or area of research. 

Please note that the open call for presentation or poster submissions deadline is Friday 27th February 2026.

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Fri, 05 Dec 2025 15:38:26 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/87f22416-4425-4af0-a0eb-d0e1cde614cc/500_dec2026.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/87f22416-4425-4af0-a0eb-d0e1cde614cc/dec2026.png?10000
United Nations staff brief HCRI students on career-building in international institutions /about/news/united-nations-staff-brief-hcri-students-on-career-building-in-international-institutions/ /about/news/united-nations-staff-brief-hcri-students-on-career-building-in-international-institutions/730413The Humanitarian & Conflict Response Institute (HCRI) hosted two United Nations (UN) officials to brief students on some of the types of work conducted by UN humanitarians and routes into the UN.This month, HCRI hosted a careers webinar with staff from UNICEF and UNDP Türkiye. 

The speakers shared their personal experiences of joining the UN system, and gave practical advice on the job application process.

The guest speakers were:

  • Laura Sunnen, Global Humanitarian Access Adviser, UNICEF, HQ, New York

  • İpek Özel, Human Resources Administrator, UNDP Türkiye

The webinar also covered the volunteering route, through ‘’.

HCRI has produced two careers guides, which can be accessed via: 

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Thu, 04 Dec 2025 13:53:55 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/dd0d3146-e006-4e4f-9e17-af334c161773/500_unevent-hcri-nov25.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/dd0d3146-e006-4e4f-9e17-af334c161773/unevent-hcri-nov25.jpg?10000
New study exposes how conspiracy theories go mainstream across Europe /about/news/how-conspiracy-theories-go-mainstream-across-europe/ /about/news/how-conspiracy-theories-go-mainstream-across-europe/730103New pan-European research has shown that the spread of conspiracy theories across the continent is driven by a continuous feedback loop between media reporting, political rhetoric, protest movements and social media algorithms - not any single cause.

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New pan-European research has shown that the spread of conspiracy theories across the continent is driven by a continuous feedback loop between media reporting, political rhetoric, protest movements and social media algorithms - not any single cause.

The involves 14 researchers from across Europe, and it has examined how conspiracy theories take shape differently in the UK, German-speaking countries, the Balkans, the Baltics, Slovakia and Poland. Their findings highlight that conspiracy narratives reflect the political cultures, histories and social tensions of each region, meaning that approaches to tackling them must be tailored rather than imported wholesale from elsewhere.

A key theme across the reports is the feedback loop that enables conspiracy narratives to circulate. Even when politicians or media outlets refer to a conspiracy theory to debunk it, the resulting attention helps it spread further via social media amplification and mainstream exposure. This blurring of online and offline spaces allows fringe ideas to influence political rhetoric, as seen in Europe-wide variations of the “Great Replacement” narrative.

The research also explores how conspiracies evolve in response to local concerns. In the UK, anxieties around Covid-19 restrictions fed into narratives about “15-minute cities”. In German-speaking countries, stigma around conspiracism has pushed much of it to the online sphere. In the Baltics and the Balkans, the legacy of foreign occupation, conflict and surveillance shapes suspicion of elites and fuels a sense of victimhood. Conspiracy theories in Poland and Slovakia frequently target gender and LGBTQ+ rights, often influenced by US culture-war narratives.

The reports identify a lack of evaluation of initiatives designed to counter disinformation. Some fact-checking and NGO efforts themselves become targets of conspiracist suspicion, undermining trust and the stability of their funding. Nevertheless, media literacy campaigns, debunking and fact-checking each have a role to play when adapted to national contexts.

In the UK, the REDACT team argues that the current Online Safety Act does not go far enough. Unlike the EU’s Digital Services Act, it does not explicitly address health misinformation, election-related disinformation or AI-generated content, leaving gaps in the regulation of systemic risks.

Ultimately, the project concludes that tackling conspiracy theories requires more than closing individual online channels. Efforts must address the structural political and social conditions that allow conspiracist narratives to flourish, as well as the business models that incentivise sensational content. The researchers urge a move away from simply asking why the public lacks trust, towards making institutions genuinely worthy of trust.

 

Vlogٷ is globally renowned for its pioneering research, outstanding teaching and learning, and commitment to social responsibility. We are a truly international university – ranking in the top 50 in a range of global rankings – with a diverse community of more than 44,300 students, 12,800 colleagues and 585,000 alumni.  Sign up for our e-news to hear first-hand about our international partnerships and activities across the globe. 

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Tue, 02 Dec 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b37266dc-0d7f-4992-9282-628d6d85e037/500_gettyimages-1411957789.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b37266dc-0d7f-4992-9282-628d6d85e037/gettyimages-1411957789.jpg?10000
Study highlights rise of ‘authoritarian peacemaking’ and its implications for Ukraine /about/news/authoritarian-peacemaking-and-its-implications-for-ukraine/ /about/news/authoritarian-peacemaking-and-its-implications-for-ukraine/729864As Donald Trump’s White House places huge pressure on Ukraine to sign a peace deal, a team of experts has published a new study examining what they describe as a worldwide shift towards “authoritarian peacemaking” - a model of conflict resolution shaped not by international institutions or liberal democracies, but by authoritarian and semi-authoritarian states whose interests lie in control, influence and geopolitical advantage rather than long-term solutions.

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As Donald Trump’s White House places huge pressure on Ukraine to sign a peace deal, a team of experts has published a new study examining what they describe as a worldwide shift towards “authoritarian peacemaking” - a model of conflict resolution shaped not by international institutions or liberal democracies, but by authoritarian and semi-authoritarian states whose interests lie in control, influence and geopolitical advantage rather than long-term solutions.

The study, set to be published in journal Washington Quarterly, traces how traditional peacemaking - rooted in international law, rights and negotiated compromise - has been eroded over the last two decades. According to the authors, the Iraq War, the post-9/11 security paradigm and growing global competition have weakened the norms that once governed international conflict resolution. This has opened space for powerful states to broker deals that prioritise strategic gain over accountability or the wishes of the affected population, as seen in the Ukraine peace plan drawn up by the USA and Russia.

The research draws on the concept of “Revisionist Conflict Management,” a framework relying on transactional bargaining, economic incentives and top-down deals that freeze conflicts rather than resolving their causes. The authors argue that these patterns are increasingly visible in conflicts across the Middle East and Africa - and now in Europe too.

The findings have particular resonance for the current efforts to end the war in Ukraine. The proposals floated by the USA give greater weight to Russian territorial “realities on the ground”, and involve conversations where Ukraine’s role is more limited than expected for a state whose sovereignty is at stake. This reflects concerns highlighted in the research - that peace deals in the current climate risk being shaped by external actors, not those living with the consequences.

The study compares this dynamic to earlier conflicts where authoritarian or centralised governments acted as mediators while pursuing their own agendas. In the authors’ view, this risks creating “victor’s peace” arrangements that halt fighting but entrench dominant states’ interests, leaving questions of justice, accountability and democratic legitimacy unresolved.

The researchers note that public opinion in Ukraine remains strongly opposed to ceding territory, and that Ukrainian society continues to insist on a settlement that restores borders and addresses wartime abuses. The tension between these expectations and geopolitical pressure, they argue, is emblematic of the broader global transition their study describes.

“By examining the Ukraine case through this lens, our research offers a wider warning about the international system - as global power becomes more fragmented and traditional norms weaken, the nature of mediation itself is changing,” said Oliver Richmond, Professor in International Relations, Peace & Conflict Studies at Vlogٷ. 

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Fri, 28 Nov 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d65e2567-995f-4c45-81c1-3ad95320f446/500_gettyimages-2232389194.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d65e2567-995f-4c45-81c1-3ad95320f446/gettyimages-2232389194.jpg?10000
HCRI Anthropologist Recognised with Top Feminist Scholarship Award for Groundbreaking Work on Kashmir /about/news/hcri-anthropologist-recognised-with-top-feminist-scholarship-award/ /about/news/hcri-anthropologist-recognised-with-top-feminist-scholarship-award/729871, Lecturer in Disasters and Climate Crisis at the , has won the Gloria Anzaldúa Book Prize for his monograph,

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, Lecturer in Disasters and Climate Crisis at the , has won the Gloria Anzaldúa Book Prize for his monograph,

Widely regarded as one of the highest honours in the field of feminist studies, the prize is named in tribute to renowned Chicana poet, feminist theorist, and writer Gloria Anzaldúa. It is awarded annually to groundbreaking monographs that significantly advance multicultural feminist research, particularly within Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.

The National Women’s Studies Association announced the award at its annual conference in San Juan, Puerto Rico, in November.

The jury described the book’s contributions as follows:

Atmospheric Violence: Disaster and Repair in Kashmir offers incredible insights and invitations as we take up [the author’s] question: ‘how we can operate in ways that warp the distance between the academy and community, expert and subject, story and theory, life and poetry’? [The] generous, incisive, beautifully written and visual work informs a lyrical and generative text that is disobedient to the colonial disciplines of extraction normalized in the infrastructure of knowledge production. Atmospheric Violence enriches the depth of Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality studies in [its] offering of rich and complex ethnographic scholarship that continually asks readers pause and reframe the role of the researchers, modalities of living and erasure, and the ever-present question of the politics of our location before we can even fathom a response to ‘Who Can Stand with Kashmir?’ [We] thank [the author] for inviting us to pause and delve into these rich scenes of an otherwise.”

This is the fifth international award the monograph has won since its release last year.

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Thu, 27 Nov 2025 15:49:38 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bb8d7078-81a7-4b56-9b38-ac99014a8762/500_omeraijazi.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bb8d7078-81a7-4b56-9b38-ac99014a8762/omeraijazi.jpg?10000
Research calls for “sportswashing” rethink amid FIFA Peace Prize rumours /about/news/research-calls-for-sportswashing-rethink-amid-fifa-peace-prize-rumours/ /about/news/research-calls-for-sportswashing-rethink-amid-fifa-peace-prize-rumours/729762As global attention turns to rumours that FIFA may award a new “Peace Prize” to US President Donald Trump later next month, new research has argued that public debates about politics and sport need far more nuance than the familiar narratives of “sportswashing” allow.

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As global attention turns to rumours that FIFA may award a new “Peace Prize” to US President Donald Trump later next month, new research has argued that public debates about politics and sport need far more nuance than the familiar narratives of “sportswashing” allow.

Two new open-access journal articles by Dr Vitaly Kazakov have challenged popular assumptions about how political actors use sport to shape global opinion - and, crucially, how media and audiences participate in that process. Taken together, the studies offer a timely rethink at a moment when sport’s symbolic power is again colliding with international politics.

The first article, published in , revisits the now-ubiquitous term used to describe attempts by authoritarian governments or international organisations to launder their reputations through sport. Dr Kazakov argues that the concept is often taken for granted, treated as a straightforward description of elite and always effective narrative manipulation rather than a complex, contested and historically recurring phenomenon.

The research identifies what Dr Kazakov calls a “normative trap” - a tendency for public commentary, policy analysis and even some academic work to embed moral judgements into the concept of “sportswashing” omitting important aspects of analysis. This, he suggests, can obscure the very dynamics the term is meant to illuminate.

“As debates continue about how meaningful FIFA’s new Peace Prize will be, and who it might be awarded to, it’s more important than ever to understand how narratives about sport take shape and impact political and social life around the globe,” Dr Kazakov said. “If we treat ‘sportswashing’ as a fixed label rather than a process involving media coverage and audience interpretation, we risk misunderstanding why these stories resonate - and who they actually influence.”

His second article, published in the , goes further by examining how information is circulated, authenticated and emotionally charged through sport. Using Qatar’s 2022 FIFA World Cup as a case study, the article applies a five-part “disinformation lifecycle” model developed by Vlogٷ’s Professors Vera Tolz and Stephen Hutchings alongside Dr Kazakov and Dr Sofia Tipaldou from Panteion University, Greece.

The model highlights how political messaging around sport evolves over time, crosses borders and adapts to different languages and cultural contexts. It also emphasises the active role played by journalists and global audiences, whose emotional investments in sport can amplify both criticism and celebration.

“These studies show that sport doesn’t just transmit political messages - it transforms them,” Dr Kazakov added. “Media organisations, fans, NGOs and policymakers all contribute to how ideas about politics, morality and identity circulate around major sporting events.”

The research offers a pointed reminder that, in an era where symbolic gestures from global sporting bodies can carry enormous political weight, understanding the mechanics of narrative formation is essential. Debates around sport, reputation and political power are set to continue - and this work provides a crucial framework for interpreting them.

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Thu, 27 Nov 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3666a653-1e7b-44ff-ac68-783da96f8fc7/500_donald_trump_state_visit_to_qatar.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/3666a653-1e7b-44ff-ac68-783da96f8fc7/donald_trump_state_visit_to_qatar.jpg?10000
Post-Covid school attendance crisis is hitting disadvantaged children hardest /about/news/post-covid-school-attendance-crisis/ /about/news/post-covid-school-attendance-crisis/729574Experts from Vlogٷ are warning that school attendance across England still hasn’t recovered for many children since the pandemic - and the gap between rich and poor pupils is growing. 

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Experts from Vlogٷ are warning that school attendance across England still hasn’t recovered for many children since the pandemic - and the gap between rich and poor pupils is growing. 

Their findings are the latest in the , which calls for urgent action to help every child stay in school and thrive.

The data shows that:

- Children with Education Health and Care Plans are seven times more likely to miss more than half their school sessions.
- Pupils on Free School Meals are four times more likely to have severe absence.
- Suspensions are nearly four times higher for pupils with special needs or living in poverty.

“Too many children are being failed by a system that doesn’t meet their needs,” said Professor  Caroline Bond, who co-led the research alongside Dr Luke Munford. 

The researchers say progress on attendance since the pandemic has been slow - and for some children, things are getting worse. They’re calling for a joined-up approach that brings together schools, families and community services. This could include:

- Family Hubs which offer early help, advice and activities to support school readiness
- More flexible routes through education, like apprenticeships and internships
- Enrichment activities, mental health and careers support to support pupil’s broader engagement with learning
- Stronger relationships between teachers, pupils and parents
- Involving young people in decisions to increase their sense of belonging and safety

“Every missed day of school means a missed opportunity,” said Baroness Anne Longfield, founder of the Centre for Young Lives. “This research shines a light on the urgent need to fix attendance and make sure every child gets the education they deserve.”

The Child of the North campaign is a partnership between the N8 Research Partnership and Health Equity North which brings together universities across the North of England - including Manchester, Leeds, Durham, York, Lancaster, Liverpool, Sheffield and Newcastle - to push for fairer futures for children across the North of England.

“If we want to give every child a fair start in life, we need to fix attendance - and that means fixing the barriers that stop children from feeling they belong in school,” said Professor Mark Mon-Williams, who leads the campaign.

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Tue, 25 Nov 2025 12:00:01 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/08067467-b6e1-4f5b-8161-6d38b3757761/500_gettyimages-1047047834.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/08067467-b6e1-4f5b-8161-6d38b3757761/gettyimages-1047047834.jpg?10000
University of Manchester hosts unveiling of 2026 BRIT Awards Trophy /about/news/university-of-manchester-hosts-unveiling-of-2026-brit-awards-trophy/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-hosts-unveiling-of-2026-brit-awards-trophy/729192Vlogٷ proudly hosted the unveiling of the official 2026 BRIT Awards trophy design at the University’s , marking a major cultural moment as the BRITs prepare to be hosted in Manchester for the first time in their history.

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Vlogٷ proudly hosted the unveiling of the official 2026 BRIT Awards trophy design at the University’s , marking a major cultural moment as the BRITs prepare to be hosted in Manchester for the first time in their history. 

The trophy, designed by internationally acclaimed Manchester-born designer was unveiled during a special event celebrating both the city’s creative heritage and the University’s role as a hub for arts, design, music and performance. Vlogٷ’s , home to the renowned - the UK’s first large-scale, dedicated collection for the preservation and study of popular, counter- and youth culture - helped frame the significance of the occasion. 

At the event, attended by fashion, music and drama students from across the University, guests witnessed the first public reveal of the iconic trophy and took part in an in-depth Q&A with Williamson. The conversation, led by , Head of Collections, Teaching and Research at the John Rylands Library, offered students and attendees unique insight into the designer’s creative process, his career journey, and what it means to see the BRITs come to his home city. 

Williamson’s design draws deeply from Manchester’s identity. Crafted in amber-toned resin reminiscent of the golden honey of the worker bee, the city’s enduring symbol of resilience, the trophy sits atop a globe representing the global reach and influence of British music. 

Heather Cole from the John Rylands Research Institute and Library added: “It was a privilege to host Matthew Williamson and introduce our students to the creative thinking behind this year’s BRITs trophy.  

At the John Rylands Library, and through the British Pop Archive, we are committed to preserving and celebrating the cultural movements that shape British identity. Seeing a Manchester-born designer lead this new chapter of the BRIT Awards resonates strongly with our mission, and it was inspiring to give students direct access to such an influential figure.” 

, taking place on Saturday 28th February at Manchester’s , marks the first time the ceremony will be hosted outside London. This year’s trophy places Manchester and the University, firmly at the centre of the BRITs’ new era. 

Matthew Williamson joins a distinguished list of creatives who have shaped the BRITs trophy, including , , , , , , , . Each year, the BRITs commission a leading artist to reinterpret the iconic statue, ensuring it remains a dynamic symbol of British creativity. 

As the BRIT Awards begin their first-ever chapter in Manchester, the University’s involvement underscores its commitment to celebrating and fostering the city’s rich cultural landscape while offering transformative experiences for its students. 

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Thu, 20 Nov 2025 13:28:59 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6ded6eca-b0a0-45e5-a2e7-be0e960cc66d/500_britstrophylaunch-03.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6ded6eca-b0a0-45e5-a2e7-be0e960cc66d/britstrophylaunch-03.jpg?10000
Scientists learn to see the hidden world beneath our feet - from the sky /about/news/hidden-world-beneath-our-feet-from-the-sky/ /about/news/hidden-world-beneath-our-feet-from-the-sky/728831A new study by Dr Angela Harris from Vlogٷ and Professor Richard Bardgett from Lancaster University has revealed that scientists can now detect the hidden world of microbes living in the soil - from the air.

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A new study by Dr Angela Harris from Vlogٷ and Professor Richard Bardgett from Lancaster University has revealed that scientists can now detect the hidden world of microbes living in the soil - from the air.

Published in , the research shows that detailed airborne images capturing many parts of the electromagnetic spectrum can be used to predict the abundance and diversity of microbes that live in the soil beneath plant canopies. This offers a new way to monitor soil health and biodiversity.

Soil is the most biodiverse and complex habitat on Earth, and the microbes that live in it - tiny bacteria and fungi that recycle nutrients, store carbon, and keep ecosystems healthy - are fundamental to a healthy planet. Yet, because they live underground, they are notoriously difficult and expensive to measure across large areas. 

Recent research shows that the types of plants growing in an area and their traits - such as how fast they grow or what their leaves are made of - can strongly influence soil microbes. What was not known until now was whether these relationships hold up to predict the abundance and diversity of microbes across different ecosystems.

In this study, researchers used airborne sensors that record light far beyond what the human eye can see. Because these sensors capture hundreds of narrow wavelength bands, they reveal fine details about plant leaves and canopies, such as their chemistry, structure, and overall health. 

By combining this rich spectral information with field measurements of soil microbes and plant traits collected across the continental United States through the National Ecological Observatory Network (NEON), the team found strong links between plant canopy reflectance and the types and diversity of microbes living in soil.

“The chemistry and structure of plant leaves, which determine how they reflect light, are tightly linked to the conditions of the soil they grow in,” said Dr Harris. “Because plants and microbes often respond to the same environmental factors - like soil nutrients or climate - we can use what’s happening above ground to predict what is happening below.”

Importantly, the study showed that full-spectrum hyperspectral data - which captures far more detail than traditional satellite imagery - performed far better than simpler vegetation indices such as NDVI. This suggests that upcoming hyperspectral satellites, including the European Space Agency’s CHIME and NASA’s Surface Biology and Geology (SBG) missions, could transform how we monitor soil health on a global scale.

Beyond advancing ecological science, the research could provide vital tools for tracking soil carbon storage, monitoring land degradation, and supporting sustainable land management in the face of climate change. 

“This research opens up a powerful new window into Earth’s hidden biodiversity, providing a way to map and monitor soil biodiversity at large scales in a cost-effective way,” said Professor Bardgett.

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Thu, 20 Nov 2025 09:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/76e91dc6-a4c7-4a99-a246-1582e118242d/500_gettyimages-505339680.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/76e91dc6-a4c7-4a99-a246-1582e118242d/gettyimages-505339680.jpg?10000
New study questions the success of town’s billionaire-led revival /about/news/new-study-questions-the-success-of-towns-billionaire-led-revival/ /about/news/new-study-questions-the-success-of-towns-billionaire-led-revival/729225Once known to locals as “Bish Vegas” for its bustling pubs, bars and nightlife, Bishop Auckland in County Durham is now at the centre of a very different story. 

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Once known to locals as “Bish Vegas” for its bustling pubs, bars and nightlife, Bishop Auckland in County Durham is now at the centre of a very different story. 

New research from Dr Saskia Warren at Vlogٷ has revealed how the town’s economic decline and cultural transformation have been shaped by an unusual form of philanthropy - and why this raises pressing questions about power, accountability and fairness.

Dr Warren’s study, published in the journal, investigates the multimillion-pound regeneration led by City of London financier Jonathan Ruffer. Through his charities The Auckland Project and 11 Arches, Ruffer has poured private wealth into the town, launching attractions including the Spanish Gallery, the Faith Museum and the large-scale historical pageant Kynren. His vision is to reinvent Bishop Auckland as a heritage-driven tourist destination.

But Dr Warren’s findings suggest this approach, while headline-grabbing, has not solved the deep problems faced by local people. Bishop Auckland’s town centre remains in visible decline, with shuttered shops and limited job opportunities. 

Young residents told local consultations they wanted affordable restaurants, music festivals and free access to Auckland Castle. Instead, much of the investment has been directed into cultural assets that charge entry fees and appeal to visitors from outside the region.

The research highlights a critical tension - philanthropy can bring money and attention to struggling towns, but it also risks concentrating power in the hands of wealthy individuals whose interests may not align with community needs. In Bishop Auckland, Ruffer owns or controls many central buildings, from pubs to heritage sites, effectively reshaping not only the landscape but also the town’s identity.

This model - described by Dr Warren as “evangelical philanthrocapitalism” - mixes religious values with capitalist investment. While it promises moral renewal and economic revival, it echoes a Victorian-style paternalism where elites decide what is “good” for society.

Residents are encouraged to volunteer in cultural projects, but in an area facing poverty and unemployment, unpaid labour can deepen inequalities rather than resolve them.

Dr Warren also points to risks of instability. Disputes between Ruffer and Durham County Council over control of government “levelling up” funds have made headlines, with the philanthropist even threatening to withdraw his estimated £50,000 a day of financial support. This raises fears about what happens if such private investment is suddenly pulled from a town that has come to rely on it.

Her research challenges the idea that philanthrocapitalism alone can fix the social and economic damage caused by austerity and industrial decline. Instead, it calls for more democratic decision-making, fairer regional distribution of cultural funding, and careful scrutiny of how wealthy donors shape public life.

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Thu, 20 Nov 2025 00:11:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4bd3e951-2da0-46ac-b5a5-90de1f80a2da/500_1200px-bishop_auckland.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/4bd3e951-2da0-46ac-b5a5-90de1f80a2da/1200px-bishop_auckland.jpg?10000
New commissioned report calls for national strategy for older prisoners as numbers reach record high /about/news/new-commissioned-report-calls-for-national-strategy-for-older-prisoners-as-numbers-reach-record-high/ /about/news/new-commissioned-report-calls-for-national-strategy-for-older-prisoners-as-numbers-reach-record-high/728659A major , in partnership with , is calling for an urgent national strategy to support the rapidly expanding population of older prisoners in England and Wales. With people aged 50 and over now representing 24% of the prison population according to the most recent report of the Chief Medical Officer (), and four times as many people over 60 in custody compared with 2002, the report highlights the vital need for age-responsive practice across the prison estate.   

These findings come as growing evidence shows that older prisoners are often assigned unsuitable activities or excluded from them altogether, resulting in disengagement from the prison community and long periods spent in their cells. As sentencing patterns mean more people are ageing behind bars, the report emphasises that the structure and purpose of daily activities have become central to maintaining wellbeing, dignity, and a sense of meaning to the time spent in prison. 

The report stresses that improved staff awareness and training with respect to older prisoners must underpin any system-wide response. With a greater understanding of age-related health conditions, mobility limitations, and psychosocial challenges, prison staff can play a crucial role in enabling access to what the report emphasises as ‘meaningful activities. The report includes a practical toolkit designed to support officers and managers in adapting to the distinct needs of an ageing population. 

Drawing on diaries, interviews, and ethnographic research with prisoners aged 50 and over across Category A, C, and D prisons, report co-authors, , and , of the , The University of Manchester, explore what makes activities meaningful to older people in custody. The report sets out practical, evidence-based recommendations for prisons nationwide. 

Across the study, participants highlighted that learning new skills and activities supporting autonomy would foster personal growth and a sense of control. Exercise, especially spaces dedicated to ages 50+, would benefit physical and emotional well-being. Being given responsibility through meaningful roles would add to a sense of value, and supportive peer conversations were seen to be crucial to countering isolation and maintaining community. Many participants also expressed concerns about reduced interaction with staff as a result of high turnover and increasing administrative pressures. 

 

Building on these findings, the report outlines recommendations across five core principles: 

  • Recognition: Develop regular forums for older prisoners to share insights, and create structured pathways, such as peer mentoring, skills banks, and volunteering programmes, allowing them to contribute to prison life in meaningful ways.
  • Responsibility: Expand opportunities that build autonomy and purpose, including gardening schemes, animal-assisted programmes, self-catering initiatives, and facilitated group cooking sessions.
  • Recreation: Reframe social and recreational engagement as essential to a healthy prison regime. This includes establishing designated age-friendly spaces, weekly clubs, shared memory activities, and carefully designed intergenerational events.
  • Stimulation: Provide more opportunities that foster curiosity and dialogue, such as guest speaker events, prisoner-led seminars, and reading groups.
  • “Staying in the Game”: Equip older prisoners to remain connected to the modern world through IT literacy training, budgeting workshops, and tailored exercise programmes that promote long-term wellbeing. 

These findings make clear that meaningful activity is not a luxury for older prisoners; it is a lifeline and something essential for reintegration and resocialisation upon release. By embedding recognition, responsibility, recreation, stimulation, and connection at the heart of prison regimes and interactions, the system can ensure that growing old in custody does not mean growing invisible. These changes are essential because they offer not just a novel perspective on old age, that is not just linked to health and vulnerabilities, but also gives emphasis to the importance of nourishing those features which are so essential to reintegration into society, thus building continuity rather than rupture between the time spent in prison and release. 

This study is part of  funded by the 

Access the full report:  

 

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Our conversations with older people in prison made one thing unmistakably clear: meaningful activity is essential to their wellbeing and pathway towards release. Whether it’s learning something new, having a say in their daily lives, staying physically active, or simply connecting with others, these experiences give people purpose and dignity. The study shows that when prisons and those work there recognise and support these needs, older prisoners can thrive rather than disappear into the background.]]> Tue, 18 Nov 2025 11:00:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ebdc08c3-7445-4eee-8ee4-4ea16dccae62/500_adobestock_379738929.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ebdc08c3-7445-4eee-8ee4-4ea16dccae62/adobestock_379738929.jpeg?10000
Remembering Dr Lee Kai Hung CBE DL 1935 – 2025 /about/news/remembering-dr-lee-kai-hung-cbe-dl-1935--2025/ /about/news/remembering-dr-lee-kai-hung-cbe-dl-1935--2025/728490“If there is no dialogue, there is no understanding

If there is no understanding, there is no trust

If there is no trust, there is no harmony

If there is no harmony, there is no peace”

 ~Dr Lee Kai Hung~

It is with deep sadness that we have learnt about the passing of Dr Lee Kai Hung CBE DL, a close friend, wise advisor and Honorary Graduate of Vlogٷ. Dr Lee was an extraordinary person who strongly believed in the transformative power of friendship. His quiet determination and personal values focused on strengthening trust and understanding across cultures.

Dr Lee played a critical role in shaping two of the University’s most significant cultural and educational institutions – Manchester Museum’s Lee Kai Hung Chinese Culture Gallery and the Manchester China Institute - hubs of connection and understanding on both local and global levels. His generosity and vision brought to life spaces that celebrate dialogue, curiosity and the rich stories that connect people.

What he created and inspired here has touched many hearts and will continue to elevate the experiences of students, staff and communities. His enduring legacy will spark ideas, build trust and encourage compassion for generations to come.

A member of the Langworthy Circle of Benefactors, Dr Lee was recognised as one of the University’s most visionary supporters. His unwavering values and remarkable generosity have left a lasting impact on the University, the city of Manchester and beyond. His philanthropy shaped the University’s identity, strengthened the community and created new student experiences. 

Professor Duncan Ivison, President and Vice-Chancellor of Vlogٷ, said:

“Dr Lee’s vision left an enduring impact on Vlogٷ, the city and the wider community. He understood the unique power of education, culture and dialogue to bring people together with peace and empathy. We will honour his life and his values through the work of the Dr Lee Kai Hung Chinese Culture Gallery and the Manchester China Institute – institutions that foster understanding between the UK and China, deepen connection between people and enrich students’ experiences. We are profoundly grateful for Dr Lee’s friendship and we will remember him with deep respect for his ambition for a more harmonious and inclusive world.”

On behalf of the entire University community, we offer our heartfelt condolences to Dr Lee’s family and friends, and our lasting gratitude for Dr Lee’s friendship and partnership.

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Stronger communities linked to better health, new study finds /about/news/stronger-communities-linked-to-better-health/ /about/news/stronger-communities-linked-to-better-health/728371New research from Vlogٷ has found that areas with higher community resilience experience better health - including lower rates of drugs, alcohol and suicide deaths - even when those areas face significant deprivation.

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New research from Vlogٷ has found that areas with higher community resilience experience better health - including lower rates of drugs, alcohol and suicide deaths - even when those areas face significant deprivation.

The study tested a new “Community Resilience Index” which measures how well local areas can withstand long-term pressures such as economic hardship, poor housing and inequality. Unlike traditional deprivation scores, it focuses on the strengths of a community - things like local infrastructure, social connection, opportunities and stability.

The team analysed data from 307 local authorities across England. They looked at five health measures - deaths of despair (including alcohol-specific deaths, drug-related deaths and suicide), cardiovascular disease, COVID-19 mortality, excess deaths during the pandemic and people’s self-rated general health. 

Their findings, published in the , showed that areas with higher resilience scores had lower rates of deaths of despair, lower cardiovascular disease mortality and more residents reporting good health. These patterns remain even after accounting for deprivation, meaning that resilience offers extra insight into why some communities stay healthier than others.

One of the most striking discoveries was how resilience interacts with deprivation. In the poorest areas, resilience appeared to make the biggest difference. For deaths of despair in particular, communities with higher resilience had lower rates compared to equally deprived areas that lacked the same local strengths.

Interestingly, the index did not predict COVID-19 mortality or pandemic-related excess deaths - the researchers say this may reflect that some aspects of resilience – such as good transport links, mobility and strong social connectedness – can increase exposure risk during fast-moving infectious disease outbreaks.

The team believes their findings could help shape future public health policy. While deprivation measures like the Index of Multiple Deprivation will remain key tools, resilience-based measures may help councils and national bodies identify communities that need support - not just because of what they lack, but because of the assets they can build upon.

The researchers hope the index will be used alongside deprivation indices to guide investment in social infrastructure, voluntary sector capacity, community spaces and local connectivity.

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Fri, 14 Nov 2025 08:30:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eff79193-9d31-4db0-bed2-e65e627b3dfd/500_gettyimages-1167543017.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eff79193-9d31-4db0-bed2-e65e627b3dfd/gettyimages-1167543017.jpg?10000
The arts can transform young people’s wellbeing and deliver big economic returns, study finds /about/news/the-arts-can-transform-young-peoples-wellbeing/ /about/news/the-arts-can-transform-young-peoples-wellbeing/728355A new study led by Vlogٷ’s #BeeWell team and PBE (formerly Pro Bono Economics) has found that artistic activities can dramatically improve young people’s wellbeing - with effects equivalent to the happiness boost that unemployed adults experience when moving into work.

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A new study led by Vlogٷ’s #BeeWell team and PBE (formerly Pro Bono Economics) has found that artistic activities can dramatically improve young people’s wellbeing - with effects equivalent to the happiness boost that unemployed adults experience when moving into work.

, based on the Factory International Schools Programme (FISP), compared students who took part in a creative intervention with a control group who did not. It found that creative pursuits like poetry, photography and music composition can help teenagers express themselves, build confidence and reconnect with learning - all while offering significant value for money.

The findings come at a critical time. The UK has the lowest levels of youth wellbeing in Europe, with one in four young people reporting mental health difficulties by the age of 19. However, school funding for arts subjects continues to decline, leaving many children - especially those in disadvantaged areas - without any access to creative opportunities.

FISP, run by Factory International, worked with 181 pupils across five Greater Manchester schools, including those facing barriers such as low attendance or financial hardship. Over ten months, professional artists led workshops in schools, using different art forms to help pupils explore big themes. Examples include collaging to examine 'What is power?' and photography to explore 'My stomping ground.'

The results speak for themselves - the study found that taking part improved young people’s life satisfaction scores by 0.6 points on a 10-point scale, a change comparable to one of the most powerful wellbeing boosts possible – a move from unemployment to employment. Using Treasury-approved methods to put a monetary value on wellbeing, this is worth almost £10,000 per young person.

The programme delivered an estimated £7 in benefits for every £1 spent, which shows that arts engagement is as good for the economy as it is for the mind.

Behind these figures are some powerful personal stories. Alexa, a Year 9 student who moved to the UK recently, used to shy away from sharing her ideas. Through the programme, she found her voice - writing poetry, mentoring younger students and dreaming of becoming a writer.

Brian, another participant, faced a turbulent year after his mother’s illness. Through music, photography and collage, he found a safe space to express emotion and rebuild confidence. He’s now on a scholarship studying Sports Science, and is determined to use his creativity to help others.

With arts subjects continuing to decrease in school timetables, the research provides compelling evidence for policymakers to rethink how creativity is valued.

“This analysis meaningfully contributes to the body of evidence on investing in arts and culture as an investment in young people’s future,” said Dr Maliha Rahanaz, author of the report. “Every young person deserves the chance to imagine, create and belong.”

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Thu, 13 Nov 2025 12:50:25 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e590ad59-add9-4f0a-bd29-ef90518b157c/500_gettyimages-2240098102.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e590ad59-add9-4f0a-bd29-ef90518b157c/gettyimages-2240098102.jpg?10000
Supporting the academic journey with the launch of The Fellowship Academy /about/news/supporting-the-academic-journey-with-the-launch-of-the-fellowship-academy/ /about/news/supporting-the-academic-journey-with-the-launch-of-the-fellowship-academy/728210Over 30 new research fellows gathered at Manchester Museum to take part in the launch of The Fellowship Academy within the Faculty of Humanities. Designed to provide wrap-around support to our exceptional intake of research fellows, the Fellowship Academy offers an annual Humanities focused programme of development for the first time.  

The Faculty has a broad range of fellowships including those of the University’s own , the and . The aim is to ensure that new fellows are well settled into the University and can engage with all of the support available as well as contribute fully to our research culture.   

Associate Vice Dean of Research and Professor of Geography comments: “The Fellowship Academy provides a fantastic opportunity to ensure that every fellow has a fantastic experience and provide them with pathways in terms of engagement across our centres, institutes and research groups, as well as build a community to enhance the sharing of good practice and experiences.

, Vice Dean for Research added: “This is a brilliant innovation that has been developed by listening to our previous cohorts and ensuring that we co-design support that is relevant and applicable to their needs. I’m really delighted to have one of the largest cohorts of humanities fellows in recent years. I’m looking forward to spending time with our fellows across the next three years.” 

 

To apply for fellowships or learn about the Faculty of Humanities funding opportunities please visit our Funding & Fellowships webpage.   

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New report calls for comprehensive overhaul of UK counter-terrorism policies /about/news/overhaul-of-uk-counter-terrorism-policies/ /about/news/overhaul-of-uk-counter-terrorism-policies/728075The University’s is among 14 experts who compiled the of the Independent Commission on Counter-Terrorism Law, Policy and Practice, which was published today by the Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law. 

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The University’s is among 14 experts who compiled the of the Independent Commission on Counter-Terrorism Law, Policy and Practice, which was published today by the Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law. 

The report is based on extensive research and evidence from over 200 experts, practitioners, policymakers, academics and community representatives. 

Professor Pilkington’s remit was to scrutinise the evidence around the Government’s Prevent programme - which aims to identify and rehabilitate people at risk of radicalisation - drawing on her research expertise in youth engagement and the societal drivers of extremism.  

Referrals to Prevent increased markedly after 2015, when it became a legal duty for teachers, social workers, nurses and other frontline professionals to report people they believed to be at risk of being drawn into terrorism or extremism. Referrals jumped from a few hundred a year before 2015, to an average of 6,458 per year since 2015 and to a record number of 8,517 in 2024-25. 

More than two thirds of these referrals were for concerns that had no - or no clear - ideological dimension, meaning that a counter-terrorism intervention was not an appropriate response.  Almost half of referrals were for children aged 11-17, and a third had at least one mental health or neurodivergence condition.  

“We have lost a lot of trust in communities over the Prevent programme,” said Professor Hilary Pilkington. “The whole of society has to live better together, and that requires social cohesion for all communities.”

“It should constitute one element of a broader, more holistic and better resourced multi-agency safeguarding approach that addresses diverse drivers of violence and to which individuals are referred via a ‘big front door’,” Hilary added.

The Commission sets out 113 recommendations to modernise the UK’s counter-terrorism framework and strengthen its fairness, focus and accountability. 

The report concludes that while the UK’s counter-terrorism system remains world-leading, it has grown complex and overbroad. Key reforms are needed to ensure it remains effective, proportionate, and rooted in democratic values. As well as the recommendations concerning the Prevent programme, it also recommends that the government: 

  • Narrow the legal definition of terrorism, ensuring clarity and proportionality.  

  • Reform proscription powers, introducing time-limited reviews and stronger parliamentary and judicial oversight.

  • Tighten terrorism offences, ensuring prosecutions are fair, proportionate, and grounded in clear intent.  

  • Restore equality in citizenship law, limiting deprivation powers and ensuring fair treatment under the law.  

  • Invest in social cohesion, recognising that inclusion and trust are vital to long-term security. 

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Tue, 11 Nov 2025 17:06:22 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c7c054ad-fe9d-4930-b45b-d0f3f3462c95/500_gettyimages-1432361999.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/c7c054ad-fe9d-4930-b45b-d0f3f3462c95/gettyimages-1432361999.jpg?10000
New study shows AI enhances teacher development /about/news/new-study-shows-ai-enhances-teacher-development/ /about/news/new-study-shows-ai-enhances-teacher-development/726845Research from the offers vital early insights into how AI tools can be responsibly and effectively embedded into teacher training. The preliminary findings from year 1 of the three-year longitudinal pioneering research project explore the integration of generative AI in primary teacher education, centred on the use of (TMAI) within the University of Manchester’s Primary PGCE programme

Despite early concerns about over-reliance on AI, initial findings indicate that trainee teachers demonstrated a critical, creative, and context-aware use of the technology. The study revealed that AI can actually enhance, not diminish, professional judgement, resourcefulness, and contextual sensitivity when supported by clear guidance and reflective practice.  

Building on the University of Manchester’s ‘Outstanding’ -rated PGCE programmes - 2011, 2018, and 2024 -, teacher training at the Manchester Institute of Education continues to lead innovation in the field. With AI becoming deeply embedded in young people’s lives, it’s essential to prepare future teachers to navigate and shape its role in education and society. 

Most trainees used AI to generate lesson materials, such as activities, model texts, prompts, and visual resources, rather than relying on it for full lesson planning. Importantly, many trainees demonstrated strong contextual judgement, adapting AI-generated content to suit the specific needs of their pupils, and used the tools to extend their creative capabilities rather than replace them.  

Emerging themes from this early stage of the project include the importance of context awareness, the potential for AI to support workload management, and the need for strong professional judgment in evaluating and adapting AI outputs. The research also identified the development of prompt engineering skills and critical fact-checking as essential components of effective AI use in teacher education.

The next phase of this research will involve the collection of AI-generated prompts and outputs, enabling researchers to track usage trends and assess the long-term impact of AI on teacher development. The research team – Liz Birchinall, , , , , , and - also see a key opportunity for universities to collaborate with schools to help bridge the gap between innovative research and everyday classroom practice.  

Embedding AI into teacher training at Vlogٷ is already delivering real benefits for the local community. Each year, approximately 8,400 children across Greater Manchester are taught by PGCE trainees on placement, bringing high-quality, AI-informed teaching into local classrooms. On average, 80% of our graduates secure teaching roles within 20 miles of the University, making the programme’s impact lasting, local, and growing.  

This work also contributes to a broader national and international conversation about how education systems can respond to and shape the rapid evolution of generative AI. As the research continues, Vlogٷ remains committed to helping shape a future in which AI enhances the quality, ethics, and creativity of teacher education.  

This study was funded by the Flexible Learning Programme at Vlogٷ.

Access the report on FigShare: 

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Tue, 11 Nov 2025 00:01:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b290517d-441a-41de-b917-86bbc5bfb781/500_kenny-eliason-zfso6bnzjtw-unsplash.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b290517d-441a-41de-b917-86bbc5bfb781/kenny-eliason-zfso6bnzjtw-unsplash.jpg?10000
Call for Interest opens for 2026 Conference on Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education /about/news/call-for-interest-opens-for-2026-conference-on-artificial-intelligence-in-higher-education/ /about/news/call-for-interest-opens-for-2026-conference-on-artificial-intelligence-in-higher-education/727600Vlogٷ has announced the Call for Interest for lightning talks and research posters for its upcoming international conference, Artificial Intelligence in Higher Education: Balancing Equity, Access, and Innovation.Vlogٷ has announced the Call for Interest for lightning talks and research posters for its upcoming international conference, , taking place 9 - 10 June 2026. 

Hosted by the , this hybrid event will bring together educators, researchers, students, policymakers, and technology specialists from around the world to explore the intersection of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI), equity, and accessibility in higher education. 

As AI technologies transform the way universities teach, assess, and collaborate, the conference will provide a critical forum to examine who benefits from these changes and who risks being left behind. 

“Generative AI is reshaping higher education in powerful ways, but the real challenge is ensuring it supports all learners,” said , Principal Investigator and Lead Conference Organiser.“This event will focus on how we can design, use, and govern AI systems to make higher education more equitable and inclusive.” 

Exploring the future of inclusive AI in education 

Through keynotes, interactive discussions, lightning talks, and poster presentations, the conference will address questions at the heart of educational transformation: 

  • How can AI be designed to support diverse learners and reduce digital divides?
  • What ethical and policy challenges must institutions confront?
  • How can collaboration between educators, technologists, and students ensure GenAI promotes inclusion rather than inequality? 

The conference themes include: 

  • Stakeholder perspectives on GenAI for equality and inclusion
  • Inclusive design and implementation of AI tools
  • Pedagogical innovation for diverse learners
  • Policy studies on GenAI for inclusive education
  • Student and staff voices on AI and equity 

Call for Lightning Talks and Posters now open 

The organising committee is inviting proposals for: 

  • Lightning Talks (in-person): Short 5 - 7-minute presentations reflecting on practice, policy, or research around GenAI in higher education. Proposals may highlight best practices or share honest accounts of challenges and lessons learned.
  • Research Posters (online or in-person): Posters exploring the relationship between AI, accessibility, and inclusion in higher education. Submissions are welcome from all disciplines and especially encouraged from students, early-career researchers, and those foregrounding underrepresented perspectives. 

Submission information 

  • Deadline for submissions: 20 December 2025, 23:59 (GMT)
  • Notification of decisions: 31 January 2026
  • Submission form: 
  • For further information, please contact: , Email: skye.zhao@manchester.ac.uk 
  • Organising team: Dr Skye Zhao, , and   
  • Further details:  (PDF, 143KB) 

About the Conference 

As part of the University’s commitment to equitable innovation,  will create a platform for interdisciplinary dialogue and collaboration across research, policy, and practice. 

The event will highlight both opportunities and challenges presented by the rapid rise of GenAI in higher education, addressing issues of ethics, accessibility, data governance, and inclusion. 

“We want to open space for creative and critical conversations about AI’s role in shaping the future of learning,” added Dr Zhao. “This conference is about ensuring that innovation goes hand-in-hand with equity.” 

The conference will take place in person at the , University of Manchester, with online participation available for global accessibility. 

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Thu, 06 Nov 2025 14:24:42 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d36b227f-4db6-4c25-b8ab-bafdf2172525/500_katja-anokhina-_7cegxtatyq-unsplash.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/d36b227f-4db6-4c25-b8ab-bafdf2172525/katja-anokhina-_7cegxtatyq-unsplash.jpg?10000
Social gender norms deepen elderly care burdens for Thai women /about/news/social-gender-norms-deepen-elderly-care-burdens-for-thai-women/ /about/news/social-gender-norms-deepen-elderly-care-burdens-for-thai-women/727583As Thailand has experienced a rapid increase in its elderly population, a new study published in has found that “social gender norms” - shared beliefs about how “altruistic” women or men should be in society - are overburdening women in the country with elderly care.

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As Thailand has experienced a rapid increase in its elderly population, a new study published in has found that “social gender norms” - shared beliefs about how “altruistic” women or men should be in society - are overburdening women in the country with elderly care.

Alongside Dr Minh Tam Bui from Srinakharinwirot University in Thailand and Professor Ivo Vlaev from the National University of Singapore, Vlogٷ’s Dr Katsushi Imai analysed national time-use survey data covering over 70,000 Thai adults to see how men and women care for their elderly family members. The study shows that women offering elderly care spend 2 to 2.5 hours on unpaid elder care each day - far more than men. 

This imbalance is partly due to the social norm about how “altruistic” women or men should be in society. In many communities in Thailand - particularly in rural areas - this social norm often forces women to be more altruistic than men as caregivers, because men are supposed to work outside. In areas with stronger gender norms, men spend much less time on elderly care than women do. Dr Bui emphasised the importance of digging deeper into the roots of caregiving inequality:

“We all know that there is a persistent gender care gap - women carry more of the burden in childcare, elder care and household work nearly everywhere in the world - but the underlying reasons for this are often understudied. We wanted to find out why and how this happens by looking at social gender norms around altruistic behaviour.” 

“We found that women swap paid work for elderly caregiving, but men do not. This unequal division of care responsibilities can lead to gender gaps in employment and wellbeing, and is worrying in terms of achieving both equality and efficiency in Thailand,” she added.  

The research team urges policymakers to recognise the value of unpaid elderly care, allocate more budget for long-term care insurance, and introduce nationwide campaigns to encourage men to engage in family care duties. This would help the country achieve UN Sustainable Development Goal 5 on gender equality by offering critical insights for building more equitable care systems and behavioural change in ageing societies.

The study informs a process that takes place in many countries worldwide where women are overburdened with care responsibilities. As populations age and family structures change, how societies value and share care work may become one of the defining social issues of the century.

The authors also raise concerns over the discontinuation of the Thai national time-use survey by the National Statistical Office. They advocate for its urgent resumption, stressing that time-use data is critical for understanding gender inequality, strengthening the care economy, and helping the government monitor its progress toward the SDGs. Without such data, key dimensions of unpaid care work remain invisible in policy design and economic planning.

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Thu, 06 Nov 2025 12:45:08 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1db84cc7-d8ba-42be-b193-d835691c05a6/500_gettyimages-2213199203.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/1db84cc7-d8ba-42be-b193-d835691c05a6/gettyimages-2213199203.jpg?10000
Buddhist spirituality could transform modern mental health care, study finds /about/news/buddhist-spirituality-could-transform-modern-mental-health-care/ /about/news/buddhist-spirituality-could-transform-modern-mental-health-care/727325A new study from an expert at Vlogٷ has found that ancient Buddhist wisdom could help address growing social and emotional challenges created by modern life and the pressures of today’s mental health systems.

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A new study from an expert at Vlogٷ has found that ancient Buddhist wisdom could help address growing social and emotional challenges created by modern life and the pressures of today’s mental health systems.

The research by trainee counselling psychologist Minwoo Kang, which has been published in , calls for a re-thinking of how spirituality can be understood and used in psychotherapy. 

Kang’s work suggests that Buddhism offers much more than meditation or mindfulness - it provides an ethical and spiritual framework that can help counter the individualism and stress often driven by neoliberalism.

“Mindfulness has become popular in workplaces and therapy rooms, but it is often stripped of its deeper spiritual roots,” Kang explains. “When used only as a productivity tool, it risks becoming part of the very system that causes people distress. Buddhism, in its full context, reminds us of compassion, interconnection and humility - qualities that modern mental health care needs more than ever.”

Kang’s paper proposes a new approach he calls “Buddhism as method.” This framework uses Buddhist teachings such as impermanence, conditionality and relativity to critically examine the ways mental-health practice can unintentionally reinforce social injustice and individual blame.

Drawing on his own experiences of growing up in South Korea and training in the UK, Kang explores how spirituality can serve as both a personal and social force for change. 

“Spiritual growth isn’t just about inner peace,” he says. “It can also inspire collective action - challenging racism, materialism and the climate crisis by helping people recognise their deep connection with others and with the natural world.”

The study highlights that Buddhist principles - like the understanding that everything is interconnected and constantly changing - can encourage psychological therapists and researchers to adopt greater self-awareness, compassion and ethical reflection in their work. 

It also argues that spirituality can empower individuals to resist the sense of isolation and competition fostered by consumer culture.

Kang hopes his research will inspire future psychologists and psychotherapists to look beyond Western, medicalised approaches to therapy and to embrace more holistic, inclusive perspectives. 

Vlogٷ is globally renowned for its pioneering research, outstanding teaching and learning, and commitment to social responsibility. We are a truly international university – ranking in the top 50 in a range of global rankings – with a diverse community of more than 44,000 students, 12,000 staff and 550,000 alumni from 190 countries.  Sign up for our e-news to hear first-hand about our international partnerships and activities across the globe. 

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Tue, 04 Nov 2025 15:06:46 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/79e1bdfd-36cc-4835-a41b-db3f3f56b983/500_gettyimages-185091185.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/79e1bdfd-36cc-4835-a41b-db3f3f56b983/gettyimages-185091185.jpg?10000
NGOs can serve communities better by listening more, researchers say /about/news/ngos-can-serve-communities-better/ /about/news/ngos-can-serve-communities-better/727188A new study has shed light on how international charities and non-governmental organisations can better serve some of the most marginalised people in the world - by learning to truly listen to them.

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A new study has shed light on how international charities and non-governmental organisations can better serve some of the most marginalised people in the world - by learning to truly listen to them.

Dr Sofia Yasmin from Vlogٷ’s Alliance Manchester Business School and Professor Chaudhry Ghafran from Durham University looked at how a major international NGO delivered a clean water and sanitation project in two of Pakistan’s poorest urban communities - one Christian, and one Muslim.

The team spent time on the ground, talking with local residents, community leaders and NGO staff. Their aim was to understand how accountability - the idea that organisations should answer to the people they serve - works in practice in places where poverty, religion, gender and social class all intersect.

“What we found was that even within poor communities, people don’t experience aid in the same way,” said Dr Yasmin. “A Christian minority neighbourhood, for example, faced a deeper level of exclusion and was grateful simply to be seen, while another Muslim community - though still poor - felt able to challenge and question the project. These differences really matter if we want development to be fair and inclusive.”

The study - published in the - revealed that while NGOs often talk about “community participation,” decision-making can remain tightly controlled by donors and distant managers. Projects are frequently governed by strict budgets and performance targets, leaving little room for flexibility or for local people to shape outcomes.

Yet the study also uncovered moments of hope. In one community, trust between residents and NGO workers grew not through slogans or workshops, but through the visible arrival of clean water systems and working infrastructure. “People believed what they could see,” said Dr Yasmin. “Trust was built when promises turned into pipes.”

The paper introduces the idea of “fluid responsiveness” - a call for NGOs to treat accountability not as a tick-box exercise, but as a living, evolving relationship with the communities they serve.

Dr Yasmin hopes the findings will encourage international charities, donors and governments to rethink how they design and monitor conservation projects. “If we want sustainable development,” she said, “we have to stop speaking for people and start listening to them - especially those who are most often ignored.”

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Tue, 04 Nov 2025 09:15:00 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5e72a2a1-aa8f-46c3-8d6a-d7663e3e0654/500_pakwater.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5e72a2a1-aa8f-46c3-8d6a-d7663e3e0654/pakwater.jpg?10000
Outdated Westminster rules undermine democracy by excluding smaller parties /about/news/outdated-westminster-rules-undermine-democracy-by-excluding-smaller-parties/ /about/news/outdated-westminster-rules-undermine-democracy-by-excluding-smaller-parties/726913The 2024 General Election was one of the most dramatic in British history, as voters turned away from the two traditional giants - Labour and the Conservatives - in record numbers. Thirteen different parties and six independents won seats in the House of Commons, making this the most fragmented Parliament ever.

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The 2024 General Election was one of the most dramatic in British history, as voters turned away from the two traditional giants - Labour and the Conservatives - in record numbers. Thirteen different parties and six independents won seats in the House of Commons, making this the most fragmented Parliament ever.

This trend has continued in the recent Caerphilly byelection, where the Labour and Conservative votes collapsed - but while the ballot box is reflecting a new era of multi-party politics, inside Westminster it is still business as usual for the main parties.

New research published in by Dr Louise Thompson from Vlogٷ shows how outdated rules in the House of Commons shut smaller parties out of key decisions, leaving millions of voters effectively unheard.

“Parliament is still operating as if it were the 1950s, when two big parties dominated,” Dr Thompson explains. “Smaller parties are treated unfairly in parliament’s rules, even though their MPs represent a growing share of the electorate. That creates a real democratic deficit.”

Currently, only the government, the official opposition and the third-largest party enjoy guaranteed speaking time, committee chairs and opportunities to hold the government to account. Everyone else - from the Greens and Reform UK to Plaid Cymru and the DUP - has no such rights.

That means these MPs often spend hours waiting in the chamber for a chance to speak, sometimes never being called at all. Even when they represent national movements like the Greens, or entire regions like Northern Ireland parties, they remain sidelined.

The problem isn’t just symbolic. Without a seat on select committees, smaller parties cannot properly scrutinise new laws. Without guaranteed debate slots, they cannot speak to issues that matter to them. In Dr Thompson’s words, “All MPs are elected equally, but inside Westminster, some are definitely more equal than others.”

At present, smaller parties rely on handshakes and goodwill to be heard. The Speaker sometimes makes space for their questions, and on rare occasions, bigger parties share their committee or debate time - but these arrangements are inconsistent and can be withdrawn at any moment. This patchwork system also favours parties that have good relationships with the big players, while leaving others with nothing. It is, Dr Thompson argues, no way to run a modern democracy.

Her study recommends that Westminster should modernise its rulebook to reflect today’s multi-party politics. She calls for formal guarantees in the Commons’ Standing Orders, giving smaller parties fair speaking rights, seats on committees and access to debates.

She also suggests borrowing ideas from devolved parliaments, such as minimum thresholds for party rights, and promoting more guesting” on committees so small party MPs can contribute where they have expertise. These reforms, she stresses, wouldn’t overhaul the system but would make it more transparent, consistent and fair for all MPs - regardless of their party.

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Thu, 30 Oct 2025 15:48:26 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bb5b2a88-f942-4d81-973d-7dcc076e0082/500_gettyimages-471935073.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/bb5b2a88-f942-4d81-973d-7dcc076e0082/gettyimages-471935073.jpg?10000
Public invited to open discussion on migration at John Rylands Library /about/news/public-invited-to-open-discussion-on-migration/ /about/news/public-invited-to-open-discussion-on-migration/726888The Migration, Refugees and Asylum Research Group at the University of Manchester’s Global Development Institute (GDI) is inviting the public to take part in an open and honest conversation about migration. 

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The Migration, Refugees and Asylum Research Group at the University of Manchester’s Global Development Institute (GDI) is inviting the public to take part in an open and honest conversation about migration. 

The event - which will be held at Manchester’s historic John Rylands Library on Friday 14 November from 2-4pm - aims to challenge harmful myths and misunderstandings about migrants and refugees in the UK and the wider world.

At a time when discussions around migration can often be divisive, this event seeks to bring people together. It offers a welcoming space for anyone with questions or concerns about migration to hear from experts, share their views and take part in respectful discussion. The goal is simple - to replace fear and misinformation with understanding and fact-based dialogue.

The event forms part of the , a global initiative that promotes truth, solidarity and the defence of academic freedom. The event will highlight the many ways migrants contribute to the city of Manchester and to communities across the UK and the wider world - from building businesses and supporting public services, to enriching culture and everyday life.

The panel will feature leading voices on migration and social justice including Dr Tess Hartland (Vlogٷ), Professor Anandi Ramamurthy (Sheffield Hallam University) and Professor Jan Nederveen Pieterse (University of California, Santa Barbara). The discussion will be accompanied by live music from Richard Fay and Intercultural Musicking and poetry from Balraj Samrai, adding creative energy to the afternoon’s exchange of ideas.

The event is inspired by the tradition of the “teach-in”, which began in the 1960s during the Vietnam War. These gatherings were created by university communities as spaces to question official narratives, learn from one another, and promote social awareness. The Manchester event will expand this format into a “teach-in/out”, inviting not just students and staff, but the wider public - ensuring everyone has a seat at the table.

While the political climate may have changed since the 1960s, the challenge of misinformation remains. In today’s UK, migrants are too often portrayed as a threat rather than a source of strength and renewal. This event aims to correct falsehoods by offering evidence-based insights and real stories of migration - celebrating diversity and community rather than division.

“Migration is one of the most debated topics in the world today, including in the UK, and is clearly shaping our national dialogue more than ever before,” said Tanja Bastia, Professor of Migration and Development. “This event is about providing a calm and engaging environment where anyone can come to learn, listen and ask questions about migration.”

Everyone is welcome to join the conversation, whether you are a resident, visitor, student, or simply curious about the realities of migration.

To reserve your place, please register on .

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Thu, 30 Oct 2025 14:20:56 +0000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_rylands-reopening-500x298.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/rylands-reopening-500x298.jpg?10000
School isolation rooms are damaging pupil wellbeing, new study warns /about/news/school-isolation-rooms-are-damaging-pupil-wellbeing/ /about/news/school-isolation-rooms-are-damaging-pupil-wellbeing/726086Urgent call for positive alternatives for schoolsChildren placed in school ‘isolation rooms’ are losing learning time, feeling cut off from their peers and suffering damage to their wellbeing, according to new research from Vlogٷ.

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Children placed in school ‘isolation rooms’ are losing learning time, feeling cut off from their peers and suffering damage to their wellbeing, according to new research from Vlogٷ.

The study, published in the , is the first large-scale investigation into internal exclusion in England and reveals that the practice is far more common - and harmful - than many parents or school leaders may realise. The researchers hope their findings will spark urgent debate among teachers, policymakers and parents about how schools can support pupils to achieve and flourish using alternative approaches to managing their behaviour. 

Among their recommendations are methods that are restorative (focusing on repairing harm and rebuilding relationships rather than solely on exclusion) and trauma-informed (recognising that some disruptive behaviour may stem from underlying trauma or adverse experiences). The research recognises the challenges of managing behaviour but calls for the development of alternative approaches.

The team of experts analysed survey data from the #BeeWell programme which included more than 34,000 pupils at 121 mainstream secondary schools across Greater Manchester. They found that one in 12 pupils (8.3%) reported being placed in isolation at least once a week, often spending more than a full school day there.

Isolation - also known as internal exclusion - involves removing a pupil from class for disruptive behaviour and making them work alone or in silence in a separate room. Unlike suspensions or permanent exclusions, there are no national rules on how isolation should be used, or for how long.

Key findings from the research:

  • One in 12 pupils (8.3%) reported being placed in isolation at least once a week
  • The average time spent in isolation was 8.5 hours a week – more than a full school day
  • Even after accounting for behavioural difficulties:
    -    Children with recognised special educational needs (an Education, Health and Care plan) were more than twice as likely to be in isolation
    -    Children on Free School Meals were more than one and a half times more likely to be in isolation
    -    Children who identified as LGBTQ+ were nearly twice as likely to be in isolation
    -    Black, Asian and mixed heritage children were more likely to be in isolation than their White British peers
  • Isolated pupils reported reduced belonging, poorer relationships with teachers, and (for girls) lower levels of mental wellbeing than a very closely matched sample of their non-isolated peers.
  • Schools with higher rates of suspensions also tended to isolate more pupils, undermining the idea that internal exclusion prevents more serious sanctions.

“Internal exclusion is happening every day in classrooms across England, yet it is largely hidden from view,” said lead author Dr Emma Thornton. “We know that it can provide an effective short-term solution for teachers dealing with disruption in their class, who want to create the conditions for all pupils to thrive. But our findings show that it is disproportionately applied to young people most in need of support, and leads to lost learning, weaker connections with teachers, and in some cases poorer mental health.”

#BeeWell is one of 40 organisations calling for a government definition of inclusion as measurable through data on the amount of lost learning - time spent away from the classroom through isolation, suspension and absence - and through pupil experience data, such as the #BeeWell data used in this study. The Inclusion for All campaign asks that the upcoming Schools White Paper should provide guidance and support schools to continuously improve and reduce the amount of time spent away from classrooms and peers.

“What’s needed is more research and practice-sharing on effective ways to set up internal spaces that are diagnostic, supportive and get children back to class as soon as possible,” said Kiran Gill, CEO of charity The Difference charity. “That’s why The Difference is working with schools across the country to better measure inclusion, and to set up spaces internally to support young people in crisis before their challenges escalate.  We’re excited to bring some of those school leaders together with #BeeWell and others at our annual conference IncludED in January to share strategies that are working, as measured by pupils’ own experiences.”

The research is part of the , a major study of young people’s wellbeing in Greater Manchester, Hampshire, Isle of Wight, Portsmouth and Southampton, funded by Vlogٷ and partners including The National Lottery Community Fund.

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Thu, 23 Oct 2025 11:43:46 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b2e054ac-71b4-4e79-ad42-82d014179c23/500_gettyimages-1316596507.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/b2e054ac-71b4-4e79-ad42-82d014179c23/gettyimages-1316596507.jpg?10000
Manchester hosts leading experts to explore the power of dangerous writings /about/news/manchester-hosts-leading-experts-to-explore-the-power-of-dangerous-writings/ /about/news/manchester-hosts-leading-experts-to-explore-the-power-of-dangerous-writings/725942When does writing become dangerous? And for whom are they potentially harmful? These were the questions at the heart of Dangerous Writing, a symposium focused on the ethics and practicalities of working with risky texts, hosted by the Manchester Museum.Led by Vlogٷ’s in partnership with the the (30 September 2025) brought together leading academics, archivists, and curators to examine how texts - from prisoners’ letters, politicians’ and military men’s diaries during wars, missionaries’ photographic pictures and reports, blogs and tweets, and anatomy controversial books - can empower, unsettle, and endanger in equal measure. 

By fostering cross-disciplinary dialogue, the symposium, co-organised by , and , encouraged participants to share diverse perspectives, uncover new insights, and explore the ethical responsibilities of engaging with these powerful writings.  

Across panels and performances, participants grappled with questions of care, responsibility, and solidarity: How do we preserve and share texts that are powerful but can be painful? What duties do researchers and curators hold towards their participants? What about audiences and the broader community – can they be traumatised by what they read too? And how can the voices of the marginalised be honoured without causing further harm? 

The programme ranged from suppressed memoirs to protest theatre, to prison blogging and the fragile preservation of refugee diaries. Presentations by and (University of Manchester) explored prisoners’ diaries and the ethical complexities of engaging with them, while international contributors highlighted struggles faced by writers across Europe. 

Emphasising the ethical challenges at the heart of the discussions, event organiser, Dr Marion Vannier, Senior Lecturer in , shared:

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Wed, 22 Oct 2025 13:20:52 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/57700486-27f1-4b46-a78b-870abcac2813/500_dsc00002.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/57700486-27f1-4b46-a78b-870abcac2813/dsc00002.png?10000
University of Manchester Modern Languages Academic wins 2025 Philip Leverhulme Prize /about/news/university-of-manchester-modern-languages-academic-wins-2025-philip-leverhulme-prize/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-modern-languages-academic-wins-2025-philip-leverhulme-prize/725938 (SALC) at the University of Manchester, has been awarded the in the Languages and Literatures category. The Leverhulme Trust administered awards commemorate the work undertaken by Philip, Third Viscount Leverhulme and grandson of William Lever, founder of the Trust.

The prize recognises the celebrates the achievements of outstanding researchers whose work has already attracted international recognition.  

Dr Pulford, who has been awarded £100,000, was selected for his multilingually-grounded ethnographic and historical research in East Asia and the former-Soviet Union. Building on degrees in both modern languages and anthropology, Ed’s work has explored everyday experiences of socialism and empire across national and ethnic borders in different parts of Eurasia. He has published extensively on China-Russia relations and cross-cultural understandings of time, ethnicity and 'friendship', including in two books entitled Mirrorlands (2019) and Past Progress (2024).  

Professor Maggie Gale, Vice-Dean of Research, Faculty of Humanities added: “We are extremely proud of Ed and his achievement and look forward to the advancement of his research and impact.” 

Professor Anna Vignoles, Director of the Leverhulme Trust, said: “We continue our centenary celebrations with the announcement of this year’s prize winners. The Trust is delighted to support them through the next stage of their careers.  

The breadth of topics covered by their research is impressive, from landscape archaeology to biomolecular mass spectrometry, applied microeconomics to adaptable wearable robotics, and pyrogeography to critical applied linguistics. Selecting the winners becomes increasingly challenging year-on-year due to the extraordinarily high calibre of those nominated.  

We are immensely grateful to the reviewers and panel members who help us in our decision-making.” 

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Wed, 22 Oct 2025 13:01:04 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5d585523-4adc-4c29-8844-97de57e57f8a/500_edpulford.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5d585523-4adc-4c29-8844-97de57e57f8a/edpulford.jpg?10000
Research shows that land can’t buy security for young Kenyans /about/news/land-cant-buy-security-for-young-kenyans/ /about/news/land-cant-buy-security-for-young-kenyans/725925An anthropologist from Vlogٷ has uncovered the hidden struggles of young men on the edges of Nairobi, who inherit land but lack the means to turn it into the financial security they desperately need.

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An anthropologist from Vlogٷ has uncovered the hidden struggles of young men on the edges of Nairobi, who inherit land but lack the means to turn it into the financial security they desperately need.

Published in , Dr Peter Lockwood’s research reveals how land ownership in Kenya’s booming peri-urban areas provides young men with a vital safety net - but also traps them in a cycle of dependence and uncertainty.

Through long-term fieldwork in Kiambu County, Dr Lockwood followed the lives of men like Cash, a 28-year-old who inherited three acres after his father’s death. Cash dreams of becoming a landlord, imagining apartment blocks rising from his family land. Yet without money to build, he admits: “I have the land, but it’s not money.”

The research highlights a dilemma faced by many young Kenyans. On one side, inherited land offers security - a place to live, a potential asset and a symbol of adulthood. On the other, without access to credit or investment, it becomes what Dr Lockwood calls a “dead asset” - valuable on paper, but unusable in practice.

Some young men choose to break away from their family land altogether, pursuing work in Nairobi’s informal economy as a way of proving independence. Others remain at home, clinging to their inheritance in the hope it will one day transform their lives. Both paths are fraught with difficulty.

The study also reflects a global concern. As house prices rise faster than wages in cities across the world, young people from Manchester to Nairobi are being told that property is their route to security. Yet many find themselves excluded from ownership or holding assets they cannot make use of.

“This research shows how property has become both a promise and a trap,” Dr Lockwood added. “It offers the illusion of escape from precarious work - but for many young people, it never delivers.”

The findings shed new light on how land, property and housing shape the futures of young people in rapidly urbanising regions, and they raise urgent questions about inequality, opportunity and the future of work worldwide.

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Wed, 22 Oct 2025 10:30:12 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/0b121b76-2c35-4866-bd78-993df6075cbb/500_gettyimages-999974428.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/0b121b76-2c35-4866-bd78-993df6075cbb/gettyimages-999974428.jpg?10000
Study examines why a third of new teachers quit within five years /about/news/why-a-third-of-new-teachers-quit-within-five-years/ /about/news/why-a-third-of-new-teachers-quit-within-five-years/725801As the government continues to grapple with the challenge of recruiting and retaining new teachers, a new study from Vlogٷ has shed light on why some flourish in the classroom, while others struggle and even leave the profession within just a few years.

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As the government continues to grapple with the challenge of recruiting and retaining new teachers, a new study from Vlogٷ has shed light on why some flourish in the classroom, while others struggle and even leave the profession within just a few years.

The research, which has been published in the , comes at a critical time. England faces a teacher shortage, with pupil numbers rising and more than one in three teachers leaving within five years of starting their careers.

The team, led by Joanne Taberner and Dr Sarah MacQuarrie at the Manchester Institute of Education, investigated whether personality traits could help explain why some early career teachers (those with fewer than two years of experience) manage the intense pressures of the job, while others burn out.

Surveying 130 new primary and secondary teachers across England - mostly aged between 21 and 30 - the study examined links between personality and “mental toughness,” a skill that reflects how well people cope with stress, setbacks and pressure.

The results were striking. Teachers who scored higher in extraversion (being outgoing and confident) and conscientiousness (being organised and diligent) also scored higher in mental toughness. In other words, those who felt more comfortable socially and were naturally more structured in their approach were better able to withstand the demands of the classroom.

More specifically, one element stood out - social self-esteem, a facet of extraversion. Teachers who felt comfortable in their own skin and believed they were liked by others were far more likely to display mental toughness. This finding, the researchers say, could explain why some teachers adapt quickly to classroom challenges like disruptive behaviour, heavy workloads and accountability pressures.

The study also explored whether “narcissism” may have hidden benefits for teachers. While some previous research has suggested that traits like self-confidence linked to narcissism could help people cope with stress, this Manchester study found otherwise  - the apparent benefits disappeared once social self-esteem was taken into account, indicating the trait offers no real benefit for teachers.

“We often focus on workload and policy pressures when discussing why teachers leave, but our findings show personal characteristics - particularly social self-esteem - play a crucial role in how teachers experience those pressures,” said Dr MacQuarrie.

The implications for teacher training are clear. Helping new teachers build confidence in their abilities and develop strong professional identities could boost their resilience and improve retention. Techniques such as structured self-reflection, mentoring and clear goal-setting may help foster the social self-esteem linked to staying power in the profession.

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Tue, 21 Oct 2025 13:58:12 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/80a57dfe-8a81-4825-bc2c-e3d46b8f5c2d/500_gettyimages-887318138.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/80a57dfe-8a81-4825-bc2c-e3d46b8f5c2d/gettyimages-887318138.jpg?10000
New model helps supermarkets keep shelves stocked during crises - and go greener /about/news/new-model-helps-supermarkets/ /about/news/new-model-helps-supermarkets/724857Supermarket shoppers across the UK are all too familiar with empty shelves when disruption strikes. Whether it was the panic buying of COVID-19, floods affecting deliveries or strikes in distribution centres, the fragility of supply chains has affected most of us in recent years. 

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Supermarket shoppers across the UK are all too familiar with empty shelves when disruption strikes. Whether it was the panic buying of COVID-19, floods affecting deliveries or strikes in distribution centres, the fragility of supply chains has affected most of us in recent years. 

In response to this, a team of researchers has developed a new way to help retailers keep goods moving during crises – at the same time as reducing their costs and lowering their carbon footprint.

The study, led by Dr Arijit De from Vlogٷ’s Alliance Manchester Business School, looked at how distribution networks can adapt when part of the system goes down. Retail supply chains rely on a mix of highly reliable but expensive distribution centres, and cheaper, more vulnerable ones that are more likely to suffer disruption. When one of these vulnerable hubs fails, the impact can cascade through the network, causing shortages, emergency transport costs and spikes in carbon emissions.

To tackle this, the team created a two-stage analytical model. First, they used game theory to understand when warehouses are likely to cooperate and share stock with one another during a disruption. Then, they built an optimisation model that works out how to move goods most efficiently across the network, not only saving money but also cutting fuel use and carbon emissions.

The model was then tested with real-world data from a UK retailer. The results showed that smarter “goods sharing” strategies - where reliable warehouses temporarily cover for disrupted ones - can significantly lower costs while keeping customer demand satisfied. When environmental factors such as fuel consumption and emissions are included, the savings are even greater.

“Events like COVID, floods or strikes show just how vulnerable supply chains are to disruption, said Dr De. “Our model gives companies a practical way to plan ahead, ensuring business continuity during crises while reducing their environmental impact. It’s about designing supply chains that are both resilient and sustainable.”

The research also found that greener, optimised redistribution strategies could reduce fuel costs by up to 30% in disruption scenarios compared to traditional approaches. That means lower emissions, lower costs for retailers, and ultimately fewer shortages for shoppers.

The study highlights practical lessons for UK supermarkets and other retailers facing uncertain times. With climate change expected to increase extreme weather events and global supply chains still under strain, building networks that can flex under pressure will be vital.

The paper, Proactive Logistics-Redistribution Strategic Planning in Response to Facility Disruptions under Contingencies, was co-authored with colleagues from the Indian Institute of Management, National Taiwan University and the University of Liverpool, and is published in the .

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Fri, 10 Oct 2025 12:06:23 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6c9ac08b-a837-4699-a159-d09cb77f84a1/500_gettyimages-1194709125.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/6c9ac08b-a837-4699-a159-d09cb77f84a1/gettyimages-1194709125.jpg?10000
Life through a lens - how photos unlock the stories behind places /about/news/life-through-a-lens/ /about/news/life-through-a-lens/724710Research from Vlogٷ has uncovered how something as simple as walking and taking photographs can reveal powerful stories about people’s lives and the places they live.

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Research from Vlogٷ has uncovered how something as simple as walking and taking photographs can reveal powerful stories about people’s lives and the places they live.

Published in The Royal Geographical Society’s , the study worked with older residents of Prestwich, Greater Manchester to explore the memories, emotions and experiences tied to local spaces - from leafy parks to busy high streets. Participants took the researcher with them on journeys, snapping photos along the way and sharing what these places meant to them.

For 67-year-old Paul, a walk through Prestwich Clough brought back vivid childhood memories of exploring ponds, catching tadpoles, and playing games with friends. For others, like Ben and Reg, a trip up a church tower became an opportunity to share stories about community, heritage, and family life. And for George, a wheelchair user, taking the tram into Manchester highlighted the challenges of accessibility - but also the importance of places like the Central Library café, where he felt welcome and connected. 

Dr Amy Barron, from the Department of Geography, led the project. She said: “Places are never just bricks, paths or buildings. They hold memories, feelings, and connections that shape who we are. By walking with people, listening to their stories, and looking at the photos they chose to take, we were able to see how deeply personal and emotional these everyday spaces really are.”

The project was carried out at a time when Greater Manchester was first starting to work towards becoming the world’s first ‘age-friendly’ city-region, a global initiative designed to make cities better places to grow old. The research highlights why it’s important to listen to the voices of older people - not just through surveys and statistics, but by taking the time to share in their experiences.

The findings show that places carry people’s histories with them. Memories of childhood, family traditions, and community connections live on in familiar landscapes. At the same time, small everyday routines — like visiting a library, volunteering at a church, or walking the dog — show how places help create a sense of belonging and identity.

The research also points to wider benefits. City planners, museums, and community groups could use similar methods to understand how people use local spaces, collect living memories, and bring different voices into conversations about the future of towns and cities.

Focusing on the voices of older people highlights the importance of everyday places and the rich, personal stories they hold. It shows that the places we pass through each day - the park, the market, the church, the tram stop - are much more than just backdrops. They are living parts of our personal and collective stories.

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Thu, 09 Oct 2025 12:30:09 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cd733f54-add0-4caf-b7c8-a14abdd70580/500_gettyimages-21544376401.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/cd733f54-add0-4caf-b7c8-a14abdd70580/gettyimages-21544376401.jpg?10000
What you study in school can shape your politics, study finds /about/news/what-you-study-in-school-can-shape-your-politics/ /about/news/what-you-study-in-school-can-shape-your-politics/724696Groundbreaking new research led by Vlogٷ has uncovered a significant and lasting link between the subjects young people study in secondary school and their political preferences. 

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Groundbreaking new research led by Vlogٷ has uncovered a significant and lasting link between the subjects young people study in secondary school and their political preferences. 

The study, led by Dr Nicole Martin from Vlogٷ alongside Dr Ralph Scott from the University of Bristol and Dr Roland Kappe from University College London, uniquely tracked thousands of English students from adolescence into adulthood.

It revealed that studying arts and humanities subjects such as History, Art and Drama during their GCSEs makes students more likely to support socially liberal and economically left-wing parties like the Green Party or Liberal Democrats.

In contrast, students who studied Business Studies or Economics at GCSE level showed increased support for economically right-wing parties like the Conservative Party. Technical subjects also influenced views, leading to greater support for socially conservative and economically right-wing parties. 

Crucially, these relationships between subjects and political support were found to persist into adulthood.

Published in the journal , the research marks the first time such effects have been observed within compulsory secondary schooling, moving beyond studies that traditionally focus on university education. 

By combining English administrative school records with a unique panel of adolescents, the study provides compelling evidence on the importance of secondary school subjects for political socialisation during the 'impressionable years' of adolescence.

“Our research demonstrates that education’s influence on our political beliefs is far more nuanced than simply the level of education attained,” said Dr Martin. “The specific subjects that young people take in school - particularly at GCSE - plays a profound role in shaping their political compass. This might be because of the content, or because of different peer groups or role models.”

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Thu, 09 Oct 2025 10:30:46 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e4043c5c-f7c5-44ad-9bb6-b674b73caedc/500_gettyimages-1047620362.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/e4043c5c-f7c5-44ad-9bb6-b674b73caedc/gettyimages-1047620362.jpg?10000
Madeleine Rees OBE delivers powerful 40th International Peace Lecture at Vlogٷ /about/news/madeleine-rees-obe-delivers-powerful-40th-international-peace-lecture-at-the-university-of-manchester/ /about/news/madeleine-rees-obe-delivers-powerful-40th-international-peace-lecture-at-the-university-of-manchester/724690Vlogٷ welcomed leading human rights lawyer Madeleine Rees OBE on Wednesday, 8 October, to deliver the 40th International Peace Lecture, a landmark event in a series that has brought together global voices on peace, justice, and human, Secretary General of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, addressed a packed Roscoe Theatre and online audience with a lecture titled The Continuous Struggle: Women’s Rights in the Last Four Decades and the Backlash Against Progress. Drawing on her work with women from Argentina, Bosnia, Syria, and Ukraine, Rees explored how gender justice has evolved in conflict-affected regions and how progress is increasingly threatened by rising authoritarianism, legal rollbacks, and cultural resistance. 

Her talk highlighted the urgent need to protect hard-won rights, confront structural violence, and reimagine peacebuilding through a feminist lens. Rees’s reflections were rooted in decades of frontline advocacy, legal reform, and international diplomacy, “We insert ourselves into what we see and learn from existing structures. Male and female binary. History matters, but it’s biased; it’s mainly not women’s views. It’s not that women were written out of history but it’s that women were never written in.” 

The lecture examined the pushback against gender and its negative impact on accessing justice, understanding conflict, and addressing its consequences. Rees argued that binary approaches, especially regarding gender, hinder the structural changes needed to end exclusion, inequality, and violence. 

The lecture explored what interdisciplinary research is required to shift from a Hobbesian dystopia characterised by perpetual competitiveness and individualism, and to rebuild or establish a shared human connection. 

The event marked forty years since former Psychology lecturer formally launched the lecture series. Inspired by staff protests against nuclear weapons at Greenham Common, the series was founded to create space for public dialogue on peace and the future. 

, Lecturer in Peace and Conflict Studies and organiser of this year’s lecture, said:

The lecture was followed by a Q&A and networking reception, bringing together students, researchers, activists, and members of the public. 

The International Peace Lecture is hosted annually by the Department of Politics in the School of Social Sciences. It remains a vital space for critical reflection, civic engagement, and global dialogue. 

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Peace is about equilibrium. If we have inequalities, discrimination, and binary narratives. We’re automatically moving away from equilibrium, causing injustice and fear. And when you have fear, you have no peace.]]> The 40th anniversary of the lecture was a wonderful opportunity to honour the founders of the series and to ensure that their legacy continues in the years ahead. Their vision for establishing the lecture remains just as relevant today as it was in 1985, and Madeleine perfectly captured that spirit by showing us how to continue striving for peace in these turbulent times.]]> Thu, 09 Oct 2025 10:27:59 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eceb7fd8-f636-4fe3-bdad-9a796986c926/500_image-2.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/eceb7fd8-f636-4fe3-bdad-9a796986c926/image-2.jpeg?10000
‘Ole’ meets ‘Ey Up!’: brass bands trumpet cultural links /about/news/ole-meets-ey-up-brass-bands-trumpet-cultural-links/ /about/news/ole-meets-ey-up-brass-bands-trumpet-cultural-links/724684In a unique tribute to cross-musical culture, 70 Valencian musicians are to march around the University of Manchester campus before performing at the nearby Christ Church Moss Side.

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In a unique tribute to cross-musical culture, 70 Valencian musicians are to march around the University of Manchester campus before performing at the nearby Christ Church Moss Side. 

The celebration, in partnership with the University’s music department and  organised by university alumnus James Keirle with  Professor of music Ricardo Climent and his sister Dr Sarah Keirle will take place at 12pm this Friday. 

It is part of a cultural exchange programme which highlights the significance of  grass roots banding culture in both the North of England and East of Spain. 

As part of the visit they will be carrying out a 45 minute march around campus performing instrumental pieces on route and at stopping points along the way. 

James Keirle, a professional musician now based in Valancia studied at the University’s renowned . 

He said: “I'm extremely proud to have trained and performed in the Northern banding tradition. Now we are lucky enough to bring two musical cultures together. 

“Valencia's rich history of symphonic wind band performance perfectly complements the University of Manchester's wonderful brass band.” 

Professor Climent, who is originally from Valencia, said: “The bands of the North of England and East of Spain are an enormous source of pride for local communities.

“This cultural exchange tour will foster new relationships with the Symphonic Wind band of Benimaclet, Valencia and celebrate the cultural power of international banding traditions.”

The banding traditions in the north of England and the Valencian regions share a common history.

Whereas the north's bands represented mines and factories, the Valencian equivalents fought for the rights of orange growers and workers unions.

Both are powerhouses of grass roots music making which made it to the highest professional level of performance.

And both foster rich and unique worlds of new compositions; both regions use competitions to drive their bands to even higher standards.

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Thu, 09 Oct 2025 09:01:36 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5279960c-5d81-4c7c-85d3-ada209a00ea5/500_whatsapp-image-2025-02-24-at-09.11.14-1.jpeg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/5279960c-5d81-4c7c-85d3-ada209a00ea5/whatsapp-image-2025-02-24-at-09.11.14-1.jpeg?10000
Cheaper, fresher, greener - new research promises lower prices for local food /about/news/cheaper-fresher-greener/ /about/news/cheaper-fresher-greener/724569A team of researchers has found new ways to make it cheaper - and greener - for small food producers to get their goods to customers.

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A team of researchers has found new ways to make it cheaper - and greener - for small food producers to get their goods to customers.

The study, led by Alliance Manchester Business School’s Dr Arijit De and published in the journal, looked at how local food hubs can work more efficiently. These hubs act like a central marketplace: farmers and small food businesses bring products to one place, where they are packed and delivered to shoppers.

While this sounds simple, the reality can be costly and environmentally damaging. Many producers operate alone, driving long distances to drop off small loads. This creates more van journeys, higher costs, and - despite being “local” - surprisingly high carbon emissions. Rural farms and food businesses face especially high distribution costs, as longer travel distances and fewer delivery points make transport less efficient.

The research team worked with Food and Drink North East (FADNE), a community business in Newcastle, which launched the ‘Local Heroes’ hub during the Covid-19 pandemic lockdowns. The hub helped over 150 producers - from dairy farmers to craft brewers - sell directly to households.

Using real delivery data, the researchers created a model to test scenarios. The results show that if producers share transport more effectively, they can cut delivery costs and fuel use. Even better, replacing diesel vans with electric vehicles could reduce costs by nearly one-third and slash carbon emissions by up to 70%.

The findings also matter for families struggling with the cost of living. Delivery costs can push up food prices. By making transport more efficient, hubs like Local Heroes can keep food affordable while still supporting small businesses. This is especially important in rural regions, where high logistics costs have long limited farmer incomes and consumer access.

“The North East has some of England’s highest child poverty levels, but also a growing demand for healthy, locally produced food,” said co-authors Dr Barbara Tocco and Professor Matthew Gorton from , Newcastle University. “This work shows how smarter logistics can help more people access it without harming the environment.”

The study also highlights resilience. During Covid-19, when supermarkets ran low on supplies, food hubs were vital to connect farmers directly with households. Strengthening those networks will help communities to withstand future shocks from pandemics, rising fuel prices or climate change.

The researchers hope their model can be used by food hubs across the UK and Europe. With farming under pressure from economic and environmental challenges, small changes in delivery routes and vehicle choices could make a big difference.

The findings build on the team’s previous research which has been shared on the EU’s business advice platform , as well as being raised in UK Parliament questions about and

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Wed, 08 Oct 2025 11:12:38 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/03414755-a8a2-42be-88fd-753ef3303309/500_gettyimages-1690809476.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/03414755-a8a2-42be-88fd-753ef3303309/gettyimages-1690809476.jpg?10000
New research sheds light on Britain’s forgotten role in the French Resistance /about/news/britains-forgotten-role-in-the-french-resistance/ /about/news/britains-forgotten-role-in-the-french-resistance/724559New research by Dr Laure Humbert from Vlogٷ and Dr Raphaële Balu from Sorbonne University has revealed how Britain’s vital contribution to the French Resistance during the Second World War was largely forgotten in France - and why this silence lasted for decades. 

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New research by Dr Laure Humbert from Vlogٷ and Dr Raphaële Balu from Sorbonne University has revealed how Britain’s vital contribution to the French Resistance during the Second World War was largely forgotten in France - and why this silence lasted for decades. 

The study, published in French journal as part of a special issue on ‘Les invisibles de la Résistance’ [the invisibles in the Resistance] edited by Professor Claire Andrieu, highlights the many ways British men and women supported the Resistance - from sending secret agents behind enemy lines to working side by side with Free French forces in mobile hospitals -  and explores why this contribution was not officially celebrated in the aftermath of war.

One striking example is the story of the Hadfield Spears hospital, a Franco-British medical unit set up in 1940 by American philanthropist Mary Spears and Lady Hadfield, with support from the Free French in London. Staffed by British nurses and doctors alongside Free French medics, the hospital followed the troops across campaigns in the Middle East, North Africa, Italy, and finally France. It treated thousands of wounded soldiers and became a symbol of cooperation between the two nations. But in 1945, just after the victory parades in Paris, the unit was suddenly dissolved. Official recognition never came, and its story slipped into obscurity.

Another case examined is that of the Special Operations Executive (SOE), the British service that parachuted around 1,800 agents into occupied France. These men and women risked their lives to arm and advise Resistance fighters, often building strong friendships with local groups. But as liberation came, Charles de Gaulle, keen to re-establish France’s independence, dismissed several of these agents in person. Their contribution, once celebrated in Britain, was gradually erased from French accounts of the Resistance.

The study shows that this sudden “falling-out” in 1944-45 was not only about personalities, but also about sovereignty and post-war politics - the result was a long-lasting “invisibility” of Britain’s role in French collective memory. 

While in the UK the exploits of SOE agents became the stuff of books, films and television dramas, and while the Hadfield Spears unit appeared at the BBC, in France these same stories were largely absent from official commemorations. 

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Wed, 08 Oct 2025 10:25:56 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a179697d-5e49-4ca1-bb03-ef592a2ac89e/500_frenchresist.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/a179697d-5e49-4ca1-bb03-ef592a2ac89e/frenchresist.jpg?10000
The Lost Decade: why Australia is playing climate catch-up /about/news/the-lost-decade-why-australia-is-playing-climate-catch-up/ /about/news/the-lost-decade-why-australia-is-playing-climate-catch-up/724551For ten long years, Australia earned an unenviable reputation as one of the world’s climate change ‘laggards’. From 2013 to 2022 its governments weakened environmental rules, cut renewable energy funding and fought against international climate agreements - climate scientists and activists dubbed it the nation’s ‘Lost Decade’.

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For ten long years, Australia earned an unenviable reputation as one of the world’s climate change ‘laggards’. From 2013 to 2022 its governments weakened environmental rules, cut renewable energy funding and fought against international climate agreements - climate scientists and activists dubbed it the nation’s ‘Lost Decade’.

Now, new research by a group of experts from Vlogٷ and the University of Melbourne has revealed how Australia went from that era of inaction to passing its most ambitious climate law in a generation - and why its transformation still hangs in the balance.

The study published in the tracks how the election of a centre-left government in 2022 sparked big changes. Within months, Australia passed the Climate Change Act, promising to cut emissions by 43% by 2030 compared with 2005 levels and reach net zero by 2050. 

The government launched plans for 82% renewable electricity by 2030, and pitched Australia as a ‘Renewable Energy Superpower’ thanks to its rich reserves of minerals like lithium and cobalt, which are essential for electric cars and solar panels.

But the researchers warn that this transformation is far from complete. Australia, they argue, is stuck on a ‘dual track’: expanding green energy on one hand, while doubling down on fossil fuel exports on the other. In fact, in 2024 the government unveiled a new ‘Future Gas Strategy’, signalling plans to keep supplying global gas markets well past 2050.

The research highlights that rather than setting bold new directions, the country copies climate policies from elsewhere (like the UK and New Zealand) and has to accept the prices set by bigger economies for its critical minerals. By waiting so long to act, Australia missed the chance to shape the global market. 

It also demonstrates the human cost - experts interviewed described how climate scientists and renewable energy experts left the country in frustration, a ‘brain drain’ that left Australia short of skilled workers just as the green economy began to boom.

“Australia’s story is a warning for all countries, especially those heavily tied to fossil fuels,” said co-author Dr Paul Tobin. “Delay now means paying the price later, not only in rising climate impacts like bushfires and floods, but also in lost opportunities for jobs, innovation and global influence.”

“If countries want to shape the future rather than scramble to catch up, they need to act boldly and early. Climate change isn’t just an environmental issue - it’s about economic competitiveness, national identity and fairness to the next generation.”

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Wed, 08 Oct 2025 10:12:21 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/904a7397-b3c6-42e7-931c-c112958738ae/500_gettyimages-2202172357.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/904a7397-b3c6-42e7-931c-c112958738ae/gettyimages-2202172357.jpg?10000
Vlogٷ signs Memorandum of Understanding with University of Washington /about/news/university-of-manchester-signs-memorandum-understanding-university-of-washington/ /about/news/university-of-manchester-signs-memorandum-understanding-university-of-washington/724100Vlogٷ has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the in the US.

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Vlogٷ has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with the in the US.

The strategic partnership will help to foster interdisciplinary research collaborations in areas such as demography, smart cities planning, business, quantum science, biotechnology, advanced materials, aerospace engineering and artificial intelligence. In addition to research projects, the partnership will pave the way for faculty exchanges and support for early career scholars.

The agreement was formally signed by Professor Stephen Flint, Associate Vice-President International at Vlogٷ and Dr Ahmad Ezzeddine, Vice Provost for Global Affairs at the University of Washington.

Dr Ezzeddine said: “We at the University of Washington are thrilled to embark on this strategic partnership with Vlogٷ.

“This collaboration between two globally recognized institutions will open new avenues for our faculty and students to engage in innovative research and educational programs that address some of the world’s most pressing challenges and opportunities. It also strengthens the bonds between our universities and communities, helping foster a deeper academic and cultural exchange.”

The University of Washington in Seattle is a leading research institution in the US and ranks 17th in the Academic Ranking of World Universities (ARWU). It is also 25th in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings, 16th in the Top US Public Universities and 8th in the US News & World Report’s Best Global Universities.

Earlier this year, Vlogٷ strengthened its ties to North America by signing a similar MoU with the University of Texas at Austin.

You can read more about Vlogٷ’s global partnerships here.

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Fri, 03 Oct 2025 09:38:59 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/812218ea-d173-4bc8-85b0-d157d60dd3ff/500_washingtonandmanchester.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/812218ea-d173-4bc8-85b0-d157d60dd3ff/washingtonandmanchester.jpg?10000
Research shows cities must do more to support older residents /about/news/cities-must-do-more-to-support-older-residents/ /about/news/cities-must-do-more-to-support-older-residents/723675To mark the upcoming , a new study from Vlogٷ is calling for cities to do more to support older people who want to stay in their own homes and communities as they age.

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To mark the upcoming , a new study from Vlogٷ is calling for cities to do more to support older people who want to stay in their own homes and communities as they age.

The research published in the looks at the idea of ‘ageing in place’ - the policy focus on enabling older adults to live well in their own home and neighbourhood of choice for as long as they wish. While this approach is often seen as positive, the study highlights that many urban areas do not provide the necessary supports to make this a reality.

According to the research team, the pressures of rising inequality, cuts to public services, and the privatisation of spaces in cities mean many older people struggle to access the support they need. Poorer neighbourhoods in particular face declining facilities such as libraries, community centres and affordable housing – resources that are crucial for wellbeing in later life.

“Most people want to stay in their homes as they grow older, but this is only possible if the communities around them are supportive,” said lead author Dr Tine Buffel. “At the moment, too many older residents are left isolated or feel invisible in their own neighbourhoods. We need new ways of organising community life so people can rely on each other, rather than just on families and/or overstretched services.”

The study looked at innovative examples from around the world that could help tackle the problem. These include:

The Village model – neighbourhood organisations run by older people themselves, pooling resources to provide services like transport, home repairs and social activities.
Naturally Occurring Retirement Communities – areas where large numbers of older people already live, supported by tailored health and community services.
Cohousing – intentionally created communities where residents share spaces and provide mutual support.
Compassionate Communities – grassroots networks that help people facing illness, end of life or bereavement.

Each model has benefits, from reducing hospital admissions to strengthening social ties, but also face challenges such as funding pressures and a tendency to leave out more disadvantaged groups.

The researchers argue that the next step is to think about ageing in place as a collaborative venture – something built on collective action, shared resources and planning with the direct involvement of older people themselves. They also call for urban planning to be less ageist, pointing out that too many urban regeneration projects prioritise young professionals over older residents. 

The study concludes that ageing in place can only succeed if communities, councils, charities and older residents work together. Without this, many people risk not being able to live independently, or being “stuck in place” in unsuitable housing and unsupported communities.

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Tue, 30 Sep 2025 12:17:13 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ad7d758c-4a05-40bd-86f2-20dbe33fecf6/500_gettyimages-13552536531.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/ad7d758c-4a05-40bd-86f2-20dbe33fecf6/gettyimages-13552536531.jpg?10000
Tackling Extremist Misogyny in the Digital Age /about/news/tackling-extremist-misogyny-in-the-digital-age/ /about/news/tackling-extremist-misogyny-in-the-digital-age/723358Dr Mihaela Popa-Wyatt urges policymakers to confront gender based ideological violence in the digital age.As misogynistic ideologies gain traction online, , Philosophy lecturer at Vlogٷ, is calling for UK policymakers to recognise gender-based ideological violence as a form of extremism under the  the UK’s counter-extremism policy. 

Dr Popa-Wyatt, who contributed key evidence to the  advocating for gender as a protected characteristic, warns that dangerous gaps remain. Her research shows extremist misogyny is not only harmful but organised, aiming to reverse gender equality through coercion, violence, and radicalisation of disaffected young men.

In , Popa-Wyatt defines misogynistic extremism as “content, acts, and practices that enforce patriarchal control through male supremacy, often via dehumanisation, intimidation, and violence.” Her findings distinguish this from everyday misogyny, emphasising the ideological, systematic nature of male supremacy, which uses the rhetoric of domination and coercion to reassert patriarchal control.

Online platforms, particularly incel forums, the manosphere, and influencer ecosystems, were found to have amplified this extremism. Recommender algorithms and generative AI enable the spread of hate content, while figures like Elliot Rodger and Andrew Tate shape a dangerous narrative of male dominance.

To counter this, Dr Popa-Wyatt urges reform of the Prevent strategy to address radicalisation in digital spaces, invest in interventions that offer positive alternatives, and support young people with empowering narratives. This involves developing digital infrastructure and partnerships capable of tackling radicalisation in less-visible online environments.

When misogyny becomes ideological and appeals to violence, it qualifies as a form of extremism,” states Dr Mihaela Popa-Wyatt. “Failing to address the rise of extreme misogyny with a holistic approach could risk further alienating men and boys into incel spaces.

These recommendations arrive ahead of ’s October 2025 review, which will consider new obligations for tech companies. Dr Popa-Wyatt stresses that gender-based violence must be central to those discussions.

Read more about Dr Mihaela Popa-Wyatt’s  and recent research, .

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Many young people are drawn in through digital cultures that frame misogyny, racism, or conspiracism as forms of empowerment or truth-telling. Without a clear understanding of these ecosystems and the emotional appeal they hold, practitioners will be ill-equipped to intervene effectively.]]> Fri, 26 Sep 2025 12:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/500_iron_bird_13.jpg?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/iron_bird_13.jpg?10000
Humanities researchers recognised at 2025 Research Staff Excellence Awards /about/news/humanities-researchers-recognised-at-2025-research-staff-excellence-awards/ /about/news/humanities-researchers-recognised-at-2025-research-staff-excellence-awards/723153Vlogٷ’s Faculty of Humanities took centre stage at this year’s Research Staff Excellence Awards, with four researchers recognised for their outstanding contributions to scholarship, impact, and interdisciplinary collaboration.Opening the ceremony, , Associate Vice-President for Research, praised the “dedication, innovation, and collaborative spirit” of this year’s winners, highlighting their role in driving forward research that resonates both within academia and across wider society. 

Research Staff of the Year

From the ,  was named Research Staff of the Year. A leading voice in urban feminist geographies, Kapsali’s work has introduced new frameworks such as transversal solidarities and critically examined philanthrocapitalism’s role in urban governance. Alongside securing major research grants and publishing in top journals, Kapsali has nurtured a thriving research culture by founding a Feminist Reading Group and mentoring colleagues through collaborative workshops. 

Best outstanding contribution to research impact 

 from the  received the award for Outstanding Contribution to Research Impact. Doran’s leadership in organising the  brought together over 300 policymakers, practitioners, activists, and researchers from 20 countries. Their work has strengthened links between research and public policy, advancing global debates on age-friendly cities. 

Reflecting on the award, Doran shared:

Best outstanding interdisciplinary research

School of Environment, Education, and Development researcher,  was recognised for Outstanding Interdisciplinary Research for their innovative work on green infrastructure. Li’s NERC-funded project, ‘’, has been cited over 700 times and shaped urban greenspace policy through collaborations with local councils and international partners. 

Speaking on the award, Dr Lei Li, noted:

Best outstanding output

Also, from the School of Environment, Education, and Development,  received the Outstanding Output award for his publication record and contributions to urban health research. With 21 peer-reviewed articles in just four years, Benton’s work has informed both academic debate and policy, including the ’s evaluation framework for health interventions. 

Benton credited Manchester’s collaborative research environment for his success:

From advancing feminist geography to shaping age-friendly policies, influencing urban health frameworks, and integrating ecology with planning, the Faculty of Humanities awardees demonstrated the breadth and societal relevance of Manchester research. 

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social responsibility agenda that supports genuine partnership-building with wider community partners are vital to achieving impact through our work delivered as part of ]]> Thu, 25 Sep 2025 08:00:00 +0100 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/93c05260-8c0e-49d9-b819-3c8e2e729cea/500_researchexcellenceawards.png?10000 https://content.presspage.com/uploads/1369/93c05260-8c0e-49d9-b819-3c8e2e729cea/researchexcellenceawards.png?10000
Data privacy push sparks tech surge in US banks /about/news/data-privacy-push-sparks-tech-surge-in-us-banks/ /about/news/data-privacy-push-sparks-tech-surge-in-us-banks/722840A new study led by Dr Sarah Zhang from Alliance Manchester Business School has uncovered how small banks in the United States are reacting to growing concerns about data privacy.

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A new study led by Dr Sarah Zhang from Alliance Manchester Business School has uncovered how small banks in the United States are reacting to growing concerns about data privacy.

The research published in the shows that when US states announce plans for stronger data privacy laws, small banks quickly boost their investment in IT before such laws are even passed. On average, banks increased their IT spending by more than a third in the year following such announcements.

The study examined 7,251 small banks across the US, using data from 2010 to 2021. The findings reveal that banks are not simply preparing to follow new rules but are also responding to market pressure - in other words, competition from rival banks and the fear of losing customers drive much of the investment.

This shows that banks are aware of how seriously the public takes data security. High-profile cases of data breaches in recent years have damaged trust in financial institutions. When banks move quickly to strengthen their systems, it reflects growing pressure to protect personal information such as names, addresses and account details.

This research also highlights that new rules can change behaviour even before they officially come into force. The effect is particularly strong for smaller banks, which face greater challenges because they have fewer resources. While big banks often already have advanced IT systems in place, small banks are forced to catch up quickly, which can be costly.

Interestingly, the study found that although banks are spending more on IT, the benefits are not immediate. Profitability often dips because of the high costs, and there is little clear evidence that the extra spending reduces cyberattacks in the short term. However, the long-term hope is that stronger systems will reduce risks and build trust with customers.

Although the study focuses on the United States, its findings are highly relevant worldwide. In Europe, the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) has already transformed how businesses handle personal data. The study suggests that even the early discussion of new laws can spark major changes in how companies prepare for the future.

As more countries and regions introduce stronger privacy protections, the study raises questions about how smaller financial institutions will cope with the cost of compliance. While consumers may benefit from improved protection, the financial burden may be felt most by smaller banks, which could in turn affect the services they provide.

The research provides valuable insights for policymakers, banks and the public. It underlines that the debate over data privacy is not only about regulation but also about competition, trust and the future of banking in the digital age.

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