Blog Post
7 Criteria for Conducting Ethical Research in Contexts of Conflict and Crisis
The final blog of our blog series.
The final blog of our blog series.
The NIHR fifth Research and Innovation for Global Health Transformation (RIGHT) call will support targeted research to strengthen health service delivery and resilience in low and middle income countries (LMICs) in the context of extreme weather events. The NIHR is seeking programmes of applied health research that can strengthen health service delivery and resilience in LMICs in the context of extreme weather events caused by the changing climate.
Apply for a fellowship to carry out independent research within a host laboratory and gain leadership skills.You must show that you have the potential to become a future research leader. Your project must be within BBSRC’s remit. The full economic cost of your project can be up to £500,000. BBSRC will fund 80% of the full economic cost.
The award will fund teams led by researchers from low- or middle-income countries (LMICs) to test interventions to manage heat-related health risks in real settings – not under laboratory conditions. By the end of the award, successful applicants will have delivered a high-quality study testing and evaluating a new or existing heat adaptation intervention with the potential to change policy and practice in LMICs.
This one-off call aims to support multidisciplinary teams to help improve our understanding of the biological significance of SARS-CoV-2 variants, focused on laboratory investigations in immunology, virology or structural biology.
About the ‘Equitable Partnerships: Lessons from Practitioners’ Blog Series At UKCDR, we know that research for development needs equitable partnerships. We also know that...
About the ‘Equitable Partnerships: Lessons from Practitioners’ Blog Series At UKCDR, we know that research for development needs equitable partnerships. We also know that...
Research questions will seek to improve the functioning of a health system and health outcomes in a humanitarian setting. Applicants should apply a systems thinking approach to explore the impact of interventions to improve health outcomes in complex, real-world humanitarian settings.
Proposals must respond to a globally recognised current or anticipated health crisis in a humanitarian setting. This will be an ongoing humanitarian crisis or an anticipated impending crisis. Proposals will be context specific and driven by evidence needs identified by stakeholders in the crisis setting.
The five-year Royal Society Wolfson Fellowships will enable UK universities and not-for-profit research institutions to attract and recruit internationally outstanding leading researchers to their organisation.