Dr Alexandra Woodall - "You just have to get out there and get involved in those networks"
Dr Alexandra Woodall talks about the benefits of starting a PhD later on in your career
Dr Alexandra Woodall talks about the benefits of starting a PhD later on in your career
In 2015, Dr Erica Harrison completed her Collaborative Doctoral Award at the University of Bristol, partnering with Czech Radio to study the Czechoslovak Government-in-Exile during the Second World War and their relationship with broadcasting.
Read more about Erica Harrison – Using a PhD in 'challenging environments'
To mark Queen Victoria’s 200th birthday, Joanna Marschner, Senior Curator at Historic Royal Palaces tells us about an exciting AHRC-funded project which explores how Victoria played a vital role in the fashioning of her own image
Read more about Victoria's Self-Fashioning: Curating Royal Image for Dynasty, Nation and Empire
As part of the AHRC’s ‘Doctoral Week’ we meet Jenny Bulstrode an AHRC Collaborative Doctoral student who has been awarded the 2018 Sarton Prize for History of Science by the American Academy of Art.
Read more about AHRC Doctoral Student scoops prestigious Sarton Prize for History of Science
Equipping the next generation of academics with skills that go beyond the academy is critical, whether they go on to become university researchers, or take their post-doctoral-level thinking to other organisations, according to Anne Sofield at AHRC duing Doctoral Week.
One of the winners of the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Research in Film Awards (RIFA) 2018 has been put forward for a BAFTA Television Award.
Read more about Victoria Mapplebeck talks about how her RIFA win became a BAFTA nomination
The arts have a vital role to play in helping marginalised communities cope with the impacts of climate change, according to Dr Katie McQuaid, an anthropologist and research fellow at the University of Leeds.
Dr Nicolas Pillai talks about the BBC's one-night-only revival of its landmark 1960s programme, Jazz 625, and why it comes at a great time for the genre.
Niall Geraghty completed his AHRC doctoral award in 2015, from the University of Cambridge, here he talks about the benefit of doing a PhD and why AHRC funding was key to being able to complete his PhD
Read more about Niall Geraghty – The benefits of doing a PhD
As we celebrate 300 years since the publication of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe - arguably the first English novel, Emma Nuttall, talks to us about what could be next for the novel - and literature - in the years ahead.