We are pleased to announce that we are advertising thirteen Collaborative Doctoral Awards (CDAs) for entry in 2021-22.
CDAs provide studentship funding for doctoral projects that are developed in partnership with an organisation outside of higher education. Enabling collaboration with a diverse range of external partners, CDAs foster links that may have long-term benefits for both partners, as well as social, cultural and economic benefits to wider communities. For doctoral students, CDAs offer an opportunity to gain professional experience outside the university environment and to develop and enhance their skill set.
CDAs advertised for entry in 2021-22 are listed below with links to further details. Further information on how to apply to the OOC DTP for studentship funding is available here.
Open University
University of Oxford
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'Class, Art, and the Influences of British India: Bateman’s' with Dr Yasmin Khan (Oxford) and Dr Christo Kefalas (World Cultures Curator, National Trust)
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'Jewish Books and their Readers in Early Modern Cambridge' with Kirsten Macfarlane (Faculty of Theology and Religion, University of Oxford), Judith Olszowy-Schlanger (Centre for Hebrew and Jewish Studies, University of Oxford) and Scott Mandelbrote (Perne Librarian and Fellow of Peterhouse)
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'New approaches to analysing English speech variation due to regional dialect and personal identity' with John Coleman (University of Oxford) and Stephen Cassidy (BT Research and Innovation)
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'Paint and Culture in Medieval England' with Professor Gervase Rosser (Professor of the History of Art, University of Oxford) and Dr Lucy Wrapson (Hamilton Kerr Institute, Fitzwilliam Museum)
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'The First History of Elizabethan England: The Making of William Camden’s Annals' with Dr Alexandra Gajda (Faculty of History, University of Oxford), Dr Neil Younger (History, Open University) and Julian Harrison (British Library)
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'Under the Volcano: Visitors to Vesuvius in the Romantic Era' with Professor Catriona Seth (Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages, University of Oxford) and Jeff Cowton MBE (Dove Cottage)
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'Women and Work in the City of London, 1870-1970' with Rowena Olegario (Faculty of History, University of Oxford) and Clara Harrow (Head Archivist, Baring Archive Ltd.)
University of Cambridge