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  The History of Environmentalism in the UK (Advert Ref: RDF18/HUM/KELLY)


   Faculty of Arts, Design and Social Sciences

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  Prof M Kelly  No more applications being accepted  Competition Funded PhD Project (Students Worldwide)

About the Project

In 1970 the Council of Europe declared the first European Year of Conservation, the UK’s incoming Conservative government created the Department of the Environment, the Ecologist magazine published its first issue and around the same time Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace were founded. Although these developments did not come as a bolt from the blue, few would dispute that the 1970s witnessed an intensification of environmental concern in British popular culture and public life. Magazines like The Vole (1977-1980) helped popularise the agenda, sitcoms like The Good Life (1975-1978) satirised the well-meaning middle-classes, and government reports like Sandford (1975) and Porchester (1977) attempted to explain the predicament and offer possible policy solutions. More broadly, popular culture became increasingly saturated with concern for nature and animals, whether through television programming like David Attenborough’s Life on Earth (1979) and the output of the BBC’s Natural History Unit or the extraordinarily successful novels of Richard Adams (Watership Down (1975) and The Plague Dogs (1977)). The growing sense of crisis was only intensified by increasing consciousness of the ecological harm caused by intensive agriculture and atmospheric pollution, the seeming incapacity of the government to protect National Parks, Areas of Outstanding Natural Beauty or Sites of Special Scientific Interest, and the increased awareness that the earth’s resources were finite, particularly in the light of rapid population growth and increasing consumption.

Few of these subjects have yet to attract their historian and this PhD Studentship provides an opportunity to shape a research agenda around these themes. The chronological scope of the proposal should fall within the period roughly bounded by the 1968 Countryside Act and the 1995 Environment Act, though those these Acts need not frame the approach. The focus might fall on popular culture and the media, local and/or national activism and lobbying, the development of conservation expertise and its impact on government policy, the ideological underpinnings of ‘green’ thinking and environmental governance, the performance of state or non-state institutions, or broader issues related to natural resource use and environmental protection. This description is intended to be indicative rather than restrictive and applicants are warmly encouraged to contact Professor Kelly, who would be happy to discuss the development of the proposal and the approach the PhD might take.

The Environmental Humanities research group at Northumbria has developed rapidly in recent years and is now a dynamic presence within the University’s research culture. Graduate students in the Humanities benefit from generous research space and resources in the recently expanded Glenamara Centre as well as those provided by the Institute of the Humanities. Considerable support and training is offered to PhD students through the Humanities Training Programme, the Teaching Shadowing Scheme, an annual PhD conference and a central Professional Development and Research Training Programme run by Northumbria’s Graduate School. Each student is provided with a research allowance for conference attendance and travel, as well as funding to support the organisation and development of research networks, conferences and seminar series.

Eligibility and How to Apply
Please note eligibility requirement:
• Academic excellence of the proposed student i.e. 2:1 (or equivalent GPA from non-UK universities [preference for 1st class honours]); or a Masters (preference for Merit or above); or APEL evidence of substantial practitioner achievement.
• Appropriate IELTS score, if required.
• Applicants cannot apply for this funding if currently engaged in Doctoral study at Northumbria or elsewhere.

For further details of how to apply, entry requirements and the application form, see
https://www.northumbria.ac.uk/research/postgraduate-research-degrees/how-to-apply/

Please note: Applications that do not include a research proposal of approximately 1,000 words (not a copy of the advert), or that do not include the advert reference (e.g. RDF18/…) will not be considered.

Deadline for applications: 28 January 2018
Start Date: 1 October 2018

Northumbria University takes pride in, and values, the quality and diversity of our staff. We welcome applications from all members of the community. The University holds an Athena SWAN Bronze award in recognition of our commitment to improving employment practices for the advancement of gender equality and is a member of the Euraxess network, which delivers information and support to professional researchers

Funding Notes

The studentship includes a full stipend, paid for three years at RCUK rates (for 2017/18, this is £14,553 pa) and fees

References

Recent publications by supervisors relevant to this project:

Quartz and Feldspar. Dartmoor: A British Landscape in Modern Times (2015)
(co-ed.) The Nature State: New Approaches to the History of Conservation (2017)

Where will I study?