About the Celebrating Impact Prize 2021

The annual ESRC Celebrating Impact Prize is an opportunity to recognise and reward researchers whose work has made a real difference to society or the economy.

Entrants' applications are reviewed by a panel of academics, engagement and knowledge exchange experts, and research users. Shortlisted applicants were invited to an interview, along with non-academic supporters who helped describe the impact of the work.

This year’s prize categories were:

Outstanding Business and Enterprise Impact
Outstanding International Impact
Outstanding Public Policy Impact
Outstanding Societal Impact
Outstanding Early Career Impact

A prize of £10,000 is awarded to the winner of each category.

This year the panel also chose to award an additional prize – Panel’s Choice – which recognises high potential and quality in other finalists’ work. Each prize is to be spent on furthering knowledge exchange, public engagement or other communications activities to promote the economic and social impact of the research.

Professor Alison Park, Interim Executive Chair, Economic and Social Research Council

Professor Alison Park, Interim Executive Chair, Economic and Social Research Council

Professor Alison Park, Interim Executive Chair, Economic and Social Research Council

Welcome

The ESRC Celebrating Impact Prize, now in its ninth year, is an annual opportunity to celebrate the success of ESRC-funded researchers in achieving and enabling outstanding economic or societal impact from their excellent research.

Our competition recognises the UK’s world-leading economists and social scientists and highlights how their work makes a difference to people and organisations within the UK and across the world.

The important contribution being made by the social sciences to helping communities and businesses navigate the pandemic features prominently among this year's finalists. Others highlight insights focused on enduring issues including education, sustainability and health. It's encouraging to see so many research teams feature among the finalists, celebrating the vital role of collaboration and teamworking within research.

The impacts of the finalists are impressive and far-reaching. All our finalists have demonstrated the impact of their work and illustrated its relevance and importance to society. They are already contributing to policy debates in their specialist areas and I am confident their influence will continue for many years to come.

I’m very proud that the ESRC has funded this work, and that we can fully recognise it through our prestigious Celebrating Impact Prize. I’d like to thank the judging panel for their considerable efforts and, of course, all the applicants for their commitment and hard work. Most importantly of all, I offer my congratulations to this year’s winners and finalists – well done.

Professor Alison Park
Interim Executive Chair, Economic and Social Research Council
Twitter: @parkali

Professor Monder Ram and Dr Imelda McCarthy

Professor Monder Ram, Dr Imelda McCarthy (CREME)

Outstanding Business and Enterprise Impact
Winner: Centre for Research in Ethnic Minority Entrepreneurship (CREME)
Professor Monder Ram and Dr Imelda McCarthy

Boosting productivity in ethnic minority microbusinesses

The UK’s 250,000 ethnic minority businesses contribute more than £25 billion to the economy. Ninety per cent of these firms are microbusinesses with 1-9 employees. In 2019 an ESRC-funded research collaboration led by Professor Monder Ram and Dr Imelda McCarthy from The Centre for Research in Ethnic Minority Entrepreneurship (CREME) explored productivity in a sector where management processes are frequently informal and business support or HR interventions are often absent.

“Despite their economic contribution, these vibrant enterprises rarely feature in debates on productivity, attract policy attention or access mainstream business support programmes and initiatives,” says Professor Ram. “This results in knowledge gaps on the meaning of productivity, the role of business support providers, and the kind of interventions that might make a difference to such firms."

The Productivity from Below (PfB) project is a co-produced, innovative model for boosting entrepreneurship through partnership-working between the Universities of Aston (lead), Birmingham and Warwick and four practitioner partners: Ashley Community Housing (ACH), an award-winning social enterprise with a keen interest in promoting the employability of migrants, the Bangladeshi Network (comprising four groups with local and national reach into the sector), Citizens UK (a national civil society alliance) and Punch Records (a business with a strong social mission to promote artists from diverse backgrounds).

“It’s clear that marginalised groups and businesses are keen to engage with academics if the relationship is based on mutual respect,” says Dr McCarthy. Practitioners worked as co-investigators on the project and contributed to dissemination events. They shared understanding of what productivity means for ethnic minority-owned microbusinesses and their specific support needs, leading to the development of customised business support programmes. “Collaborative cross-sectoral partnerships will be a key ingredient to recovery initiatives in the post COVID-19 era,” she says.

It is this collaboration that enabled PfB to rapidly respond to the needs of microbusiness during early stage lockdown restrictions and create tailored support which helped these businesses respond to the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The PfB model of working has proved highly successful over the past two years in securing major funding, demonstrating that learning and insights from grassroots initiatives can be readily scaled up. For example, in August 2021, Ashley Community Housing and the research team won a £1 million bid for funding to support migrant businesses on the continent.  

“The rest of Europe is looking at ways to enhance competitiveness, address inequality and promote collaboration, cohesion and integration,” says Professor Ram. “PfB has demonstrated traction regionally, nationally and internationally and is seen as a highly agile and innovative way of tackling these grand challenges.”

The research project ends in 2023, but the researchers are confident that the commitment to working hand-in-hand with local businesses will continue.

“Our collaborative ethos has shown that microbusinesses can be engaged in productivity-enhancing initiatives,” says Professor Ram. “This ethos has underpinned the implementation of our business support solutions and will be a key factor in our longer term objective of developing an inclusive business support ecosystem in this region and further afield.”

Boosting productivity in ethnic minority microbusinesses 

More information
CREME https://www.aston.ac.uk/research/bss/abs/centres-hubs/creme

A group of people meeting in a cafe
Professor Alexander Betts

Professor Alexander Betts

Outstanding International Impact
Winner: Refugee Studies Centre
Professor Alexander Betts, Dr Evan Easton-Calabria and Dr Kate Pincock

Gaining recognition and funding for refugee-led assistance during COVID-19

Refugee-led organisations (RLOs) have long played an important but neglected role in providing assistance and support in camps and cities around the world. A two-year project by the Refugee Studies Centre in refugee settlements in Kenya and Uganda found that RLOs are actively helping refugees with key basic services such as food, health, shelter, skills training, social insurance and education. In a survey of 8,000 refugees, 80% said they would turn to their immediate community for food; fewer than 20% would look to NGOs for help.

“When we think of humanitarian assistance to refugees, we usually assume it is delivered by UN agencies of large international NGOs, but very often it is provided by refugees themselves,” explains Professor Alexander Betts.

Prior to COVID-19, the Refugee Studies Centre’s project, which was ESRC-funded through the Global Challenges Research Fund programme, had already identified RLOs as effective, efficient, and legitimate providers of aid. When the pandemic worsened and international aid workers were forced to withdraw from refugee camps, RLOs stepped in to fill the gaps by distributing supplies, disseminating public information and serving as community health workers. YARID (Young African Refugees for Integral Development), for example, is one of over 100 RLOs in Uganda and Kenya. During the pandemic, YARID delivered food and soap door-to-door to 1,500 refugee households as well as 70,000 face masks to urban refugees in Kampala – just one of around 30 similar RLOs in Kampala alone. 

Early in the pandemic, the research team highlighted such capabilities to governments, NGOs, policymakers and potential donors through a series of online seminars featuring refugees and RLO leaders.

“We were able to showcase the great work of RLOs to senior policymakers and NGOs sitting in the same virtual room as refugees themselves,” says Professor Betts. Traditionally, governments and donors have been reluctant to allocate aid to RLOs because of concerns about risk, audit requirements and accountability. But by offering evidence-based, policy-relevant insights into how to recognise, finance and increase the capacity of effective RLOs to the UN, governments and funding organisations, the research team attracted innovative forms of finance from philanthropic foundations, new government funding and support for RLOs’ life-saving work. “Now the Canadian Government has taken the lead in providing funding, we hope that the UK government and others around the world will begin to recognise and fund the vital work that refugees themselves are doing,” he says.

Critically, the research team’s work has reshaped the debate on refugee assistance, reframing the view of refugees as passive recipients of aid and highlighting their role as active providers of assistance. 

“This shift in thinking could potentially transform the way the international humanitarian system works as it creates momentum towards more participatory global governance,” says Dr Evan Easton-Calabria. “In practical terms, we have shown that ‘protected’ populations such as refugees actually offer important and neglected sources of social protection.”

Gaining recognition and funding for refugee-led assistance during COVID-19 

More information
https://www.rsc.ox.ac.uk/publications/research-in-brief-refugees-as-providers-of-protection-and-assistance

A woman walks through a refugee camp
Professor Lucie Cluver and Dr Jamie Lachman

Professor Lucie Cluver, Dr Jamie Lachman (University of Oxford) 

Outstanding International Impact 
Finalist: COVID-19 Emergency Parenting Response Team
Winner of Panel's Choice award
Professor Lucie Cluver, Dr Jamie Lachman, Dr Franziska Meinck, Janina Steinert, Professor Lorraine Sherr MBE, Dr Inge Wessels, Dr Ohad Green, Isang Awah and Dr Yulia Shenderovich

Helping families worldwide cope with the stresses of COVID-19

In March 2020 more than 1.6 billion children worldwide left school due to COVID-19 lockdown measures. Based on their previous ESRC-funded research into HIV, Professor Lucie Cluver and Dr Jamie Lachman knew that public health emergencies and school closures lead to child abuse. Indeed, UNICEF estimates COVID-19 increased family conflict and child abuse globally by 30-50% due to the stress of school closures, lockdowns, lack of services, mental health problems and economic crisis.

“It was clear to us that parents everywhere would be challenged by COVID-19 and we had to do something – and fast – to provide positive parenting support,” says Professor Cluver. “Now was the time for information offering immediate practical usefulness, communicated empathetically, without requiring expense or expertise.”

With more than a decade of prior research and experience of implementation of evidence-based parenting programmes, members of the quickly assembled COVID-19 Parenting Emergency Response Team were able to move with speed to adapt an existing evidence-based parenting programme into a wide variety of freely accessible, culturally-sensitive, positive parenting tip sheets and radio resources. Building on existing strong partnerships with agencies such as UNICEF and the WHO, Professor Cluver, Dr Lachman and their team took just a few hours to gain the agreement of 10 UN and major donor agencies for a plan to create and disseminate parenting resources. Based on their previous research evidence, parenting tips sheets were rapidly translated into more than 100 languages in a few days with the help of volunteers including members of the World Without Orphans church network and staff from global insurance firm, Generali Insurance.

Over 200 organisations then worked to tailor the resources for different communities, and thousands of people from governments, NGOs, faith-based networks and community groups helped ensure the positive parenting messages reached the most vulnerable families in developing countries, for example through community loudspeakers to villages in Cameroon or faith-based radio sermons in Malawi.

One of the reasons the resources were so well received and shared so widely across the globe is that they were perceived primarily as positive parenting resources, rather than a violence prevention tool.

“This year has pushed almost every parent in the world to their limit, ” says Professor Cluver. “Our programme was for all the parents who have been stressed, exhausted and overwhelmed and just needed some parenting support at a very difficult time.”

Demand for parenting support is set to continue, particularly for more in-depth, long-term family support. The COVID-19 Emergency Response Team is currently developing digital versions of their full parenting programmes for delivery remotely through an app and as a text message programme. 

“By using the findings of our previous ESRC-funded research into HIV we were able to act fast in a crisis situation, and our research was able to have an almost immediate impact,” says Dr Jamie Lachman. “We are all incredibly proud of the extraordinary global team effort in which people and organisations – most of whom we have never met in person and who were juggling their own lockdown problems – have selflessly dropped everything to make this initiative work.”

Helping families worldwide cope with the stresses of COVID-19

More information
https://www.covid19parenting.com/home

A young girl holding a doll looks down from a balcony
Professor Jenny Kitzinger and Professor Celia Kitzinger

Professor Jenny Kitzinger, Professor Celia Kitzinger (Cardiff University)

Outstanding Public Policy Impact
Winner: Professor Jenny Kitzinger and Professor Celia Kitzinger, Cardiff University

Law change and new guidance protect patients’ best interests

One in three people face the end of their lives unable to make medical treatment decisions for themselves. Over the past decade, Professors Jenny Kitzinger and Celia Kitzinger have contributed to legal changes, new clinical guidelines and increased public awareness to ensure that humane, person-centred, robust decision-making processes are applied to any patient who lacks the capacity to decide for themselves.

Their ESRC-funded research into medical decision-making for patients in vegetative or minimally conscious states (prolonged disorders of consciousness) identified many cases of doctors prescribing life-sustaining treatments (such as clinically assisted nutrition and hydration) without consulting family and friends on the patient’s wishes. Frequently, patients were being kept alive for many years without any consideration of their best interests.

“We found this partly to be due to a perceived requirement to refer cases to court if withdrawing clinically-assisted nutrition and hydration was being considered,” says Professor Jenny Kitzinger, who is a social anthropologist.

Their study highlighted unintended consequences of the need for judicial approval, particularly the long delays in ending treatment when both families and clinicians had come to the decision that the treatment was no longer in the patient’s best interest. Court hearings are intimidating for families and expensive for hospitals and NHS Trusts. The researchers learned that doctors often provided medical treatment without any review of whether or not this was what the patient would have wanted – and some doctors abdicated responsibility to consider patients’ best interests at all, leaving them to be treated by default, sometimes for decades.

Through in-depth interviews with families and work tracking patient pathways, the researchers drew on their clear evidence-based findings to inform clinicians, High Court judges, the Royal College of Physicians and the BMA of the need to change the law and introduce better person-centred decision-making.

Following their work the law and guidelines are now clear, but a ‘cultural lag’ persists in some hospital and care settings where a professionally-centred rather than person-centred ethos prevails. Consequently, the researchers continue to work towards ensuring timely person-centred decision-making for all ‘coma’ patients as well as patients more generally. 

“When considering whether to continue or discontinue a treatment, ‘no decision’ is no longer an option,” says Professor Jenny Kitzinger. “All institutions and clinicians working in this area need to be fully familiar with the law and professional guidelines. They need to be sure they are consulting appropriately with the patient’s family and friends and acting in patients’ best interests, taking into account the best available clinical evidence and – crucially – information about the individual’s approach to life, and their values, wishes, feelings and beliefs.”

The researchers have raised awareness of the need for more person-centred patient care through the award-winning resource heathtalk.org website, varied publications and social media, as well as radio and TV appearances.

Law change and new guidance protect patients’ best interests 

More information
https://healthtalk.org/family-experiences-vegetative-and-minimally-conscious-states/overview

The facade of the Royal Courts of Justice in London
Professor Paul Mizen

Professor Paul Mizen (University of Nottingham)

Outstanding Public Policy Impact 
Finalist: Decision Maker Panel
Professor Paul Mizen, Julia Leather and Gregory Thwaites (University of Nottingham), Professor Nick Bloom (Stanford University) and Phillip Bunn and Lena Anayi (Bank of England)

Providing rapid, reliable business data in uncertain times

Professor Paul Mizen, with colleagues at the Bank of England and Stanford University, created the Decision Maker Panel (DMP) survey in 2016, with funding from the ESRC. DMP comprises a monthly online survey of around 9,500 senior business executives and includes specially devised questions about current business conditions, expected future conditions and uncertainty.

“Previously, business insight was based on smaller, unrepresentative surveys, while official statistics were available but with a lag,” says Professor Mizen.

The DMP survey provides much more up-to-date information than almost all other business surveys. Its innovative approach means data is available within days, enabling policymakers to view current conditions ahead of official figures. Forward-looking, it uses methods not previously used in business surveys such as questions seeking information on a range of future outcomes – for example, sales and the probability of them happening. The DMP is highly flexible in response to particular issues at a specific moment and can cover areas outside the usual domain of business surveys. It has proved that concepts, including those as subjective as ‘uncertainty’, can be measured in a meaningful way. It revealed timely and novel insights about the scale and effects of COVID-19 on business in different sectors, for example that business sales revenue fell by 30% on average between April-June 2020, but fell by 80% in the accommodation and food sector.

Professor Mizen believes the DMP highlights the value of an international team of academics and policymakers working together to produce top quality research with policy impact. Co-creator Professor Nick Bloom, an international expert in business surveys and uncertainty, ensured the team could compare results with a similar survey supported by the US Federal Reserve, enabling valuable comparisons over the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic. Collaboration with the Bank of England proved vital in ensuring information reached key decision-makers in monetary and financial policy as well as government. Its timely and reliable data on business activity and uncertainty has met an immediate need among policymakers and influenced decision-making in 10 Downing Street, Cabinet Office, HM Treasury and Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy. 

Although the DMP was initially created to help the Bank of England and UK Government make critical policy decisions under uncertainty in response to Brexit, it quickly pivoted to address a possibly even greater source of uncertainty – COVID-19. Its potential to inform decision-making during unprecedented economic shocks is now attracting interest internationally and among organisations such as the World Bank and IMF. 

“The rapid, reliable data has proved essential for the UK and US responses to the COVID-19 pandemic, but it also points to the future, indicating how businesses will respond to the ‘new normal’ after the pandemic,” says Professor Bloom. “Having developed the new tool – based on rapid business surveys gathering representative samples of data across a range of businesses types – we are unlikely to return to the old methods,” says Professor Mizen. “With government funding, these surveys will become increasingly integrated and connected to administrative, web-based and transaction data providing policymakers with better quality data for the undoubted challenges that lie ahead.”

Providing rapid, reliable business data in uncertain times 

More information
https://decisionmakerpanel.co.uk/

A woman looks at a graph on a tablet
Jacqueline Broadhead, Sarah Spencer, Nicola Delvino and Denis Kierans

Jacqueline Broadhead, Sarah Spencer, Nicola Delvino, Denis Kierans (COMPAS)

Outstanding Public Policy Impact 
Finalist: Global Exchange on Migration and Diversity at COMPAS
Jacqueline Broadhead, Sarah Spencer, Nicola Delvino, Denis Kierans, Marie Mallet-Garcia, Nathan Grassi and Rosaleen Cunningham

Integrating newcomers and vulnerable migrants

The Global Exchange on Migration and Diversity has developed ground-breaking research into integration theory and municipal initiatives that is now informing policy and practice across more than 60 European cities and beyond.

“In 2016 we developed a holistic model of the integration processes with colleagues at Bristol University in which migrants and other residents are engaged, and identified the key roles local authorities can play to facilitate these,” says Dr Sarah Spencer.

Since 2017, this model has underpinned two initiatives: Inclusive Cities, in the UK, and the City Initiative on Migrants with Irregular Status (‘C-MISE’). Inclusive Cities works with local authorities on the inclusion of newcomers in the UK while C-MISE helps city leaders across Europe to find solutions to the challenges posed by ‘irregular’ migrants who are excluded from work and most basic services. 

The research team’s comprehensive written guidance and video, providing practical examples of city responses to local residents, have also been distributed by the Council of Europe to local authorities in 46 countries.

Knowing how to respond to this section of their population has been a long-standing challenge for European cities, but often too sensitive to discuss in mainstream city networks. C-MISE has provided a safe space to start conversations between cities and share knowledge and ideas on how to address the many concerns – from provision of healthcare, shelter and legal advice to protection for victims of crime, including domestic violence. 

“It has been a turning point in building confidence and consensus that it is appropriate and feasible for cities to address the needs of these vulnerable people,” says Mr Marc Serra, Councillor for Citizen’s Rights and Participation, Barcelona City Council.

Much of the success of both C-MISE and Inclusive Cities rests on the opportunities they provide for peer-to-peer learning in a well tested city working group model based on respect for the mutual expertise of researchers and city participants. Most cities do not have the resources to conduct their own research. 

“We have a three-way learning system,” says Jacqui Broadhead. “Cities learn from each other, they learn from us and we learn from them. For cities working in isolation it is more difficult to find sustainable solutions for all residents.”

The benefits of working together are broad. Local authorities can access tried and tested initiatives to help address their social and economic policy goals, thousands of vulnerable migrants can gain the support they need, and the wider community can reap the benefits of reduced homelessness, crime prevention, greater community cohesion, and the protection of public health. 

Integrating newcomers and vulnerable migrants 

More information
https://www.compas.ox.ac.uk/global-exchange/about/

A migrant mother and daughter smiling
Dr Simon Rushton

Dr Simon Rushton (University of Sheffield)

Outstanding Societal Impact
Winner: Improbable Dialogues
Dr Simon Rushton, Dr Juan Mario Díaz-Arévalo, Dr Melanie Lombard and Dr Juan Miguel Kanai (all of the University of Sheffield); Professor Jefferson Jaramillo Marín, Dr Paula Ospina Saavedra, Daniela Mosquera Camacho and Johana Paola Torres (all of Javeriana University, Colombia); Adriel Ruiz Galván and María José Ruiz (CORMEPAZ, Colombia); and Jhohn Erick Caicedo (Office of Communication and Community Development, Mayor’s Office, Buenaventura, Colombia)

Peace and reconciliation: tackling conflict from the ground up

Buenaventura is one of the most dangerous cities in South America. A 2016 national-level Colombian peace agreement ended two decades of violent paramilitary power struggles but has not translated into peace on the ground. The port city, where 80% of citizens live in poverty, has since fallen victim to criminal gangs, drug wars and tensions between the port authority and local people. 

“People’s lives are characterised by violence and insecurity,” says Dr Simon Rushton. “In theory, Colombia is a post-conflict country, but the lived experience of communities is of political or criminal armed violence.”

This includes significant tensions that arose from attempts by the port authority to clear a largely Afro-Colombian community from informal housing on land on the coast and, as a separate issue, the port’s plans to dredge an estuary believed by local people to be the resting place of the bodies of those who disappeared during the 1995-2015 conflict.

In 2018, the Improbable Dialogues project team began working with a range of local stakeholders to co-produce participatory peace-building initiatives. 

“Crucially we didn’t come as outside experts with all the answers,” says Dr Rushton. “We saw ourselves as facilitators with evidence that grassroots, locally driven initiatives not only work in other places around the world but often work better than top-down attempts to create peace. Our goal was to help set in motion a range of local dialogues between different groups in the city who are often in conflict.”

The success of this highly collaborative effort, funded in partnership by the Colombian government through Minciencias and by the ESRC via the Newton Fund, is due to the participation of influential actors including the local human rights organisation CORMEPAZ, Javeriana University, the Office of the Mayor, community leaders and numerous grassroots organisations. Together they co-created not only a roadmap for peace but also a sustainable process of dialogue-building through the Diplomado, a conflict resolution training programme in research, communication and negotiation skills. 

Dr Juan Mario Díaz-Arévalo, a post-doctoral researcher on the Improbable Dialogues project, explains that “The Diplomado is all about giving trainees the skills to work with peers in their communities, engage productively in the dialogues we are creating and exert agency over their own situation.”

In 2019, Victor Hugo Vidal, Mayor of Buenaventura, was elected to office with a mandate to urgently address the high levels of violence in the city.

“Working with the Improbable Dialogues team on the strategy for peace and its implementation has not only allowed his new administration to start delivering on this promise, but also to take a leading role in wider regional peace-building initiatives,” says Dr Rushton.

Peace and reconciliation: tackling conflict from the ground up 

More information
https://proyecto-dialogosimprobables.com/en/proyecto/

A view of the sea at the Colombian port city of Buenaventura
Dr Rebecca Windemer

Dr Rebecca Windemer (University of the West of England)

Outstanding Early Career Impact
Winner: Dr Rebecca Windemer, University of the West of England, previously Cardiff University

Onshore wind and solar farms: improving decision-making on ageing infrastructure

The UK’s first wind turbines began operation in 1991. Today onshore wind farms generate 11% of UK electricity but 112 (17% of all wind farms) in England, Wales and Scotland are at least 15 years old and starting to reach the end of their time-limited (usually 25-year) planning consents. ESRC-funded doctoral research by Dr Rebecca Windemer at Cardiff University examined the UK’s ageing wind and solar farms and for the first time highlighted the challenges in deciding what happens to this infrastructure.

As part of her research, Dr Windemer analysed all planning and energy policies relevant to the duration and end of life of onshore wind and solar farms. She also reviewed the planning documents for all applications to repower or extend the duration of the planning consent for existing onshore wind farms in England, Wales and Scotland. She undertook in-depth studies at four wind farms and one solar farm involving interviewing developers, planners, local authorities, opposition groups, and communities, and undertook surveys of 710 residents living within 3.5 km of two wind farms. .

“My research identified significant challenges impacting the decision-making process for wind and solar farms at the end either of their 25-year planning consent or operational lives,” says Dr Windemer. “Three main options exist for end-of-life sites: first, to extend the planning consent of original infrastructure; second, to repower by replacing existing sites with newer, more efficient infrastructure or third, to decommission entirely.”

The decision-making process is not straightforward. Sites have changed since 1991. New developments may have been built nearby, land designations changed, community attitudes towards wind farms altered and newer, much taller turbines become available. These challenges, combined with the current lack of clear end-of-life policies or financial incentives for repowering, have stalled decision-making for both local authority planners and renewable energy developers. 

As a further complication, developers have long assumed that communities would inevitably grow to accept wind farms over time and support repowering, particularly if it was accompanied by financial incentives such as increased funding for community projects. Instead, Dr Windemer’s research shows that familiarity does not always lead to local acceptance, particularly when some communities were assured that infrastructure would be removed after 25 years. 

Based on these findings, policymakers are working towards clearer end-of-life policies. Across Europe, developers are adopting her recommendations on improving community engagement. Dr Windemer has shared her findings internationally at the 2020 WindEurope End-of-Life Issues & Strategies conference (and with the 400 WindEurope member organisations), leading to follow up discussions with developers and policymakers across Europe. 

"Previously many communities had little knowledge of the temporary nature of planning consents or the opportunity they have to shape the future of their local site, including co-ownership,” she explains “Gaining planning permission for new onshore wind farms in England is very difficult,” says Dr Windemer. “Understanding the future of windfarms will be essential as many governments are planning on ways to move to NetZero. If we don’t repower or life-extend existing sites, there is a risk that our supply of onshore wind energy will slowly fall over time. As more than 34, 000 wind turbines across Europe are now 15 years or older, the challenge of what to do with ageing infrastructure is Europe-wide.”

Onshore wind and solar farms: improving decision-making on ageing infrastructure 

More information
https://www.cardiff.ac.uk/research/explore/find-a-project/view/2478089-end-of-life-challenges-for-the-wind-and-solar-energy-sectors

Wind turbines on moorland
Dr Emily Marchant

Dr Emily Marchant (Swansea University)

Outstanding Early Career Impact 
Finalist: Dr Emily Marchant, Swansea University 

School health network improves pupil health and wellbeing

HAPPEN is a network which brings together education, health and research, and is part of the National Centre for Population Health and Wellbeing Research funded by Health Care Research Wales. The overall aim of Dr Emily Marchant’s PhD was to further develop this network, and expand its reach and research capacity. 

HAPPEN helps primary schools who have been tasked with the design and development of their own curriculum by the Welsh Government.

"HAPPEN’s whole ethos is about autonomy," says Dr Marchant. “It is very important for schools as based on curriculum reforms announced in 2015, health and wellbeing will now become an integral part of the new Curriculum for Wales from 2022.”

Earlier research had found a range of barriers for schools prioritising health and wellbeing because it was not a part of the assessed curriculum. As part of her PhD, Dr Marchant used the opportunity of the new curriculum development to rebrand the HAPPEN network and align its resources towards helping schools plan and implement curriculum change. 

"HAPPEN helps schools identify what they want to implement within their curriculum or the wider school based on the needs and priorities of pupils, and then liaises with local authorities, health teams and charities to support schools to do the things they want to do," she says.

HAPPEN now provides tools, including a survey for pupils to share their perspectives on health and wellbeing. Dr Marchant’s approach has meant that the results are now shared with schools as a school report and action plan, offering a meaningful framework for the design and development of their own curriculum content that meets their particular needs. The tools can also examine the impact of health and wellbeing school-based interventions. 

The HAPPEN survey has now been completed by more than 20,000 pupils in years 4-6 across Wales, providing information on topics such as physical activity, nutrition, sleep, screen time, wellbeing and mental health. Dr Marchant also linked this unique health-behaviour data with the SAIL Databank, a national database of anonymised population-level data part-funded by ESRC via the Administrative Data Research UK partnership.

A novel part of HAPPEN is that the data collected via the survey on children’s health and wellbeing not only helps improve school practice but also, by linking it with routine records in SAIL such as educational attainment, provides opportunities to investigate the different influences on children’s outcomes. At present, for example, access to COVID-19 testing data combined with HAPPEN survey data throws light on the association between child health behaviours and the likelihood of COVID-19 infection.

In addition, Dr Marchant’s rigorous evaluations of health and wellbeing initiatives such as outdoor learning and The Daily Mile have provided schools with the confidence to implement local interventions based on barriers and enablers identified by pupils, teachers and headteachers. Her decision to integrate HAPPEN action plans into the feedback from the HAPPEN Survey has prompted schools to explore practical ways of meeting their health and wellbeing targets. For example, some schools have introduced a board game club or screen time workshop to help reduce sedentary screen time while others have created certificates for health tuck shop choice to promote healthy eating.

School health network improves pupil health and wellbeing

More information
https://happen-wales.co.uk/

Children and teachers play outside under a coloured canopy

Judging panel

Chair: Jeremy Neathey, Director of Strategy and Partnerships, Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
After completing a degree in Human Geography at the University of Reading, Jeremy joined the ESRC in 1990. For a number of years he worked on research methods and the development of major data infrastructure projects including the Understanding Society longitudinal survey and Birth Cohort studies.

He took on the team head role in the then Research Directorate in 2002 before becoming Secretary to both the Research Resources Board and Training and Development Board, where he led on the introduction of the ESRC Doctoral Training Centre network. As secretary to the ESRC Research Committee he subsequently took on a role in leading the overall development of ESRC’s strategic priorities before assuming his Director role in 2019. His role includes overall responsibility for ESRC’s strategic planning, insight and evaluation, stakeholder engagement and international partnerships.

Siobhan Campbell, Deputy Chief Scientific Advisor, Department for Transport
Siobhan is Deputy Chief Scientific Adviser and Head of the Central Research Team in the Department for Transport (DfT). She oversees the central science and technology, social research, behavioural science, and evaluation teams, with an interest in the Future of Mobility; building science, research and innovation across the transport sector; and the evidence required to help us decarbonise transport. 

Siobhan is the deputy head of the UK Government’s Social Research profession (GSR), helping provide leadership and direction to government’s 1,800 GSR members. Prior to DfT, Siobhan worked in a number of government departments, including the Department of Energy and Climate Change, HM Treasury, the Scottish Government and the Home Office, on a wide range of policy and research areas. She has a PhD in psychology from the University of Glasgow.

Nafeesa Dajda, Head of Regional Growth, Satellite Applications Catapult
Nafeesa joined the Satellite Applications Catapult in January 2014. Her role as Head of Regional Growth involves creating partnerships between the research knowledge base and businesses across the UK. These collaborations ensure the pull through of great ideas related to space applications into innovative new products, services and businesses. 

Prior to the Satellite Applications Catapult she worked for five years at BlackBerry managing their global University Relations programmes, BlackBerry Academic Programme and outreach activities to encourage young people to study STEM subjects, as well as a running a women’s scholarship programme. 

Nafeesa graduated from Warwick University with a PhD in Electrochemistry and then spent a year as a postdoc researcher in Georgia State University, America. She then spent five years at the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council in a variety of University and business facing roles. 

Rita Gardner, Chief Executive, Academy of Social Sciences
Rita is an environmental geographer by training and held academic positions in King’s College, London (1979-1994) and Queen Mary University of London (1994-1996) prior to becoming the first female Director of the Royal Geographical Society (with the Institute of British Geographers), a post she held from 1996 to 2018. 

She led the transformation of the Society to a world-leading, modern learned society and professional body. She is currently Chief Executive of the Academy of Social Sciences (2019) and has held a wide range of non-executive and advisory positions. Her work has been recognised with a CBE for ‘services to geography’, leading awards from the Royal Geographical Society, the Royal Scottish Geographical Society and the American Association of Geographers, and six honorary degrees.

Lisa Harker, Director, Nuffield Family Justice Observatory
Lisa is Director of the Nuffield Family Justice Observatory (Nuffield FJO), a new organisation which aims to improve the lives of children and families by ensuring that decision-making in the family justice system in England and Wales is informed by the best data and research evidence. 

Lisa has 30 years’ experience of advancing policy and practice to improve the lives of children. She was previously Chief Executive of children’s charity The Art Room, Director of Strategy at the NSPCC, Co-Director of the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), and the government’s ‘child poverty tsar’. Lisa is also a Visiting Fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford and has first-hand experience of the family justice system as an adoptive parent of two children. 

Grant Hill-Cawthorne, Director of Research, House of Commons
Grant is a medical microbiologist and the Director of Research for the House of Commons. After completing medicine and medical training at the University of Cambridge he went to Saudi Arabia to set up a laboratory specialising in pathogen genomics, where he completed his PhD on the use of genomics for public health microbiology. 

In 2011-2012 he was an NHS Medical Director’s Clinical Fellow and the Clinical Adviser to the Deputy Chief Executive of NICE. From 2013-2018, Grant was the Senior Lecturer in Communicable Diseases Epidemiology at the School of Public Health, University of Sydney. Between May 2018 and March 2020, Grant headed POST, the academic unit within the UK Parliament that bridges research and policy. He is currently on secondment to the House of Commons as Director of Research – heading the eight research service teams of the Commons Library. Grant continues as an adjunct Associate Professor in Global Health at the University of Sydney. 

Peter Matanle, Senior Lecturer at the School of East Asian Studies, University of Sheffield
Peter is Senior Lecturer in Japanese Studies and from 2014-2020 Director of Research and Innovation at the University of Sheffield’s School of East Asian Studies (SEAS). Peter joined SEAS in 2001 after working as Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law at Niigata University in Japan.

Peter’s research interests are in the social and cultural geography of East Asian development. Within this area, his focus has been on: population, environment, and regional development in post-industrial society; the theory and practice of permanent employment in large organisations; and representations of gender at work in popular culture.