programme board

Prof. Eli Lazarus (Programme Director)
School of Geography & Environmental Science
humanâenvironmental coupled systems

Dr Valentina Cardo
Winchester School of Art
relationships between citizenship & identity

Dr Pritipuspa Mishra
History â School of Humanities
modern Indian history, postcolonial studies

Dr Christopher Prior
History â School of Humanities
imperial history & legacies of empire

Prof. Nicky Marsh
English â School of Humanities
intersections between culture & economics

Dr Ranka Primorac
English â School of Humanities
African literatures & cultures, world literature

Dr Heidi Armbruster
Languages, Cultures & Linguistics â
School of Humanities
anthropology of migration & borders

Prof. Fiona Woollard
Philosophy â School of Humanities
philosophy of pregnancy, birth & motherhood/parenthood

Prof. Emily Reid
Southampton Law School
trade & sustainability

Dr Jason Hilton
Social Statistics & Demography â
School of Economics, Social & Political Sciences
demographic forecasting

Prof. Jasmin Godbold
School of Ocean & Earth Sciences
marine biodiversityâecosystem functioning

Prof. Age Chapman
School of Electronics & Computer Science
Big Data provenance, management & ethics

Prof. Emma Plugge
School of Primary Care, Population Science
& Medical Education
health of marginalised groups, carceral spaces

Prof. Ruth Bartlett
Nursing, Midwifery & Health â
School of Health Sciences
dementia care & citizenship
cohort one (2024)

Anastasia Tsakiridi
Diet quality, health inequities, and supply chain disruptions: toward resilient food supply chains
Bio
Living and working in Greece during the financial crisis for many years, I experienced food insecurity firsthand. These experiences showed me how external shocks can impact people’s ability to maintain healthy diets, even when they’re working hard to make ends meet. This personal insight drove my passion for building resilient food systems and understanding how unexpected crises – whether financial, COVID-19, or Brexit – affect communities’ access to nutritious food, which in turn can significantly impact their physical and mental health.
My unconventional journey through 12 years of military leadership and 4 years in operations at Amazon has shaped my ability to solve complex problems. In the military, I learned the critical importance of robust supply chains and efficient resource distribution, as well as the importance of efficient stakeholder management. At Amazon, I developed my skills in operational excellence and large-scale logistics management. This diverse 16-year career has enhanced my interdisciplinary approach to complex problem-solving and stakeholder engagement.
My academic foundation includes a BSc in Geography and MSc in Operations, Project and Supply Chain Management, complemented by published research in health inequalities and supply chain management. This interdisciplinary background has equipped me to address complex food system challenges through both theoretical and practical lenses, utilising GIS, geographical analysis and spatial modelling to solve real-world problems.
Currently, my project I am working on is investigating how supply chain disruptions in fruit and vegetable distribution affect diet quality among disadvantaged populations. My research combines quantitative analysis of supply chain networks and diet modelling with stakeholder engagement in Southampton, serving as a detailed case study. Using spatial data science, network optimisations, simulations, forecasting, consumer purchasing behaviour analysis and collaborative approaches with the local city council and local businesses, I will work to identify strategies that enhance dietary resilience through improved supply chain design.
What drives me is the belief that everyone deserves access to healthy food, regardless of circumstances. Through evidence-based approaches and innovative solutions, I aim to create sustainable changes in food systems that benefit vulnerable communities. With my experience bridging theory and implementation, I’m always eager to collaborate with others who share this vision of creating more equitable and resilient food systems. Please feel free to get in touch if you want to connect and discuss future research ideas or potential collaborations in addressing food system challenges.

Liz Hingley
Creating sanctuary: resilience & arts-based initiatives in asylum seeker settings
Bio
With a grounding in art and anthropology, my interdisciplinary practice is shaped by my upbringing in Birmingham, a UK city celebrated for its diversity, with over 180 nationalities, and my experiences living across Europe and China. Blending photography, sculpture, and curation with conversation and participatory exchange, I explore the tools and rituals of belonging and belief that transcend political boundaries. I am the author of five books, including Under Gods (Dewi Lewis Publishing, 2010) and Sacred Shanghai (Washington University Press,2019).
My doctoral research expands on the methodology and critical inquiries emerging from The SIM Project, which I founded in 2017 and has since toured across eight countries. The evolving collection of unique wearable artefacts, crafted during intimate workshops, materialise and transform personal digital archives into tangible visual narratives of mobility. By amplifying the voices of people with lived experiences of forced migration, the project seeks to challenge hostile narratives around migration and democratise storytelling and archiving practices. Recognised for its impact, the project was selected by London Design Festival 2024 and exhibited at V&A, London.
I am the inaugural Honorary Artist at Migration Mobilities Bristol and has undertaken residencies at institutions including Kingâs College London (Digital Humanities), the University of Birmingham (Theology and Philosophy), the Migration Research Centre at University College London, SOAS University (South Asia Institute), and the University of Texas at Austin (Art History). Between 2013 to 2017, I was a visiting scholar at the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences.

Josie Baker
Searching for meaning and direction in resilience to extreme heat
Bio
A curiosity about the planet we live on and a fascination with the drama and spectacle of natural hazards led me to study for a BSc in Geology at Durham University. It was throughout this course that I came to realise it was societyâs interactions with these phenomena that was my real area of interest. To explore this further, I stayed on at Durham to complete an MSc in Risk. This course explored conceptualisations of risk and resilience in various contexts including natural hazards, climate change and wider society, and gave me my first experience with interdisciplinary study. I was particularly captivated by the gendered discourse of these concepts and centred my dissertation on the global absence of gender disaggregated disaster data.
After graduating I took a job as a risk manager in the construction sector, working on major programmes in London and Athens. I then took a year out to travel around New Zealand and train as a ski instructor. It was whilst travelling that I recognised my desire to return to academia to continue exploring resilience to natural hazards. This drove my decision to apply to the Programme for Interdisciplinary Resilience Studies. I was particularly keen to be a part of this programme because its approach to resilience studies is both timely and refreshing. Through fostering adaptability, creativity and divergent thinking this programme provides a research framework that inspires optimism for tackling grand societal challenges.
My doctoral research explores womenâs resilience to extreme heat in the UK. In line with climate projections, heatwaves in the UK are becoming more frequent and severe as global mean temperatures rise. The drive to create resilient communities able to cope with and thrive through extreme heat events is hindered by disagreement over the objective of resilience and a lack of empirical evidence of resilience in practice. While there is a growing body of research on the impact of heatwaves on society, there remains a significant gap in the literature concerning womenâs experiences – particularly within the UK context. My project will contribute to these research gaps by analysing womenâs lived experience of resilience to heatwaves in the UK, drawing from diverse forms of literature to uncover the memories, narratives and stories that exist in relation to past, present and future resilience.

Mitesh Solanki
Mapping Everyday Resilience in the Age of Anthropocene: Perspectives from the SMEs in Indiaâs Global City
cohort two (2025)

Elinor Williams
Rupture and resilience in post-pandemic education: rebuilding and reframing positive experiences of learning through the home education of neurodivergent children
Bio
Hi, Iâm Ellie, a 28-year-old ex-teacher from Hay-on-Wye (a very tiny town somewhere along the Welsh border). I have been an English teacher for 7 years in mainstream comprehensive schools in Birmingham and London and during this time became especially interested in the support and experiences of disabled students. I am neurodivergent and believe that this is an important part of my identity and methods as a researcher, despite leaving university very much feeling like academia wasnât âfor meâ. While I loved completing my masters in the Sociology of Education, I was frustrated with the ways disability was sometimes discussed by academics. My masterâs thesis compared experiences of students with ADHD and teachers without it to identify and âre-storyâ the stigma students faced due to their neurodivergence. My current project will involve using creative and participatory methods to explore factors which encourage resilience in neurodivergent young people in home education. I love thinking of creative ways to help young people express themselves and want to help redress the imbalance of power inherent in some education research concerning disability. Outside of my studies, I like to rock climb, sew, play video games, dance, and DJ (poorly).

Toby Kunin
Race, Nation, Resilience and Belonging: An Interdisciplinary Study of Jews and Romany Gypsies in Postcolonial Britain
Bio
I grew up in Leeds, moved down to the Midlands for a BA in Philosophy and Politics at Warwick (including a year at Sciences Po, Paris), then to London for an MA in Race, Ethnicity and Postcolonial Studies at UCLâs Sarah Parker Remond Centre. I guess Southampton is just one step further South!
Alongside my studies I have spent the last six years working in the Arts (Warwick Arts Centre, Barbican Centre), and various educational and activist projects focused on peace and justice in Israel-Palestine.
Working on
My research is focused on Jewish and Romani/y communities in post-war Britain, grappling with the parallel and connected ways that they approached questions of identity, diaspora, nation and race in the Postcolonial moment and the aftermath of the Holocaust. My MA thesis looked at Romani nationalism and internationalism, especially centred on the 1971 World Romani Congress, and the many forms of national and collective identity activists experimented with, influenced by both Zionism and anti-colonial national movements. My hope over the next four years is to expand this research to a broader and deeper grappling with Romani/y and Jewish communities, using archives, interviews and community workshops to map the wide range of ways that Jews and Romany Gypsies have understood themselves in relation to land, belonging and peoplehood, and the possibilities they present for a more inclusive understanding of minority politics and resilience.
Motivation
I grew up in a close-knit Jewish community, but only first became interested in Romani/y identity during the 2021 âKill The Billâ protest movement, which was fighting new policing legislation which included the criminalisation of trespass, disproportionately targeting Romany Gypsies and Irish Travellers. Building on my own political experience as a young Jewish activist within the Labour Party, I coordinated a communal response that focused on shared and entangled histories of othering and marginalisation. Since then I have been researching both Romani/y and Jewish histories through a range of disciplinary approaches, using theorising from Race, Ethnicity and Postcolonial Studies to grapple with these âothers withinâ, who sometimes slip through the cracks in theorising, to the detriment of both intellectual and anti-racist work.

Lee P. Foley
Examining the Resilience of UK Spaceports: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Ecosystems, Communities, and Technologies
Bio
About me: I am from a small village called Eston near Middlesbrough in the Northeast of England. I currently live in Newcastle-upon Tyne. I studied for a BA in American Studies at Northumbria University during which I also spent some time at the Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences working as part of a multidisciplinary research team. I then went on to University of Sheffield for an MA in American History before returning to Northumbria University for an LLM in Space Law. Now I am at University of Southampton undertaking an MA in History as the first component of the PIRS MA plus PhD scholarship.
As for my research interests: My primary interest is in the history of human space exploration, with a particular focus on exploring the political, social, and cultural dimensions of the United States Space Programme. This theme links my undergraduate work on the construction of the post-Apollo space programme with my MA research into the political drivers of commercial spaceflight in the 1980s. Recently I have been exploring the legal, cultural, and technical challenges of protecting outer space cultural heritage sites and artefacts on the Moon and other Celestial bodies.
My current research project âExamining the Resilience of UK Spaceports: Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Ecosystems, Communities, and Technologiesâ is first of all interested in the concept of spaceports as ecosystems. In particular, it is concerned with the UKâs nascent space launch capabilities, examining the interrelationship of space policy, space technology, space law, and local communities. Within this, I am interested in finding ways to mitigate stakeholder tensions inherent in spaceport operations as well as inserting space into the wider UK public discourse.
I am motivated to undertake this research because it is fundamentally important that the UK advances its spaceport operations, especially at a time when other nations are rapidly developing space infrastructure. I believe that for the UK to compete and thrive in the global space launch market, our spaceport capabilities must be robust, resilient, technically sound, and integrated into our national identity. By engaging with diverse stakeholders, learning from other nations, and incorporating public perspectives, I aim to elucidate the challenges of balance competing interests and building a cohesive spaceport industry. My approach is driven by the understanding that the longevity of the UKâs space sector depends on broad support and engagement, which requires embedding space within our national discourse.

Callie Langley
Composing Resilience: The Role of Music in Post-Disaster Recovery and Community Resilience in the UK

Louise Hallman
Queer Data and Resilience

Pietro Consolandi
The role of grassroots ecology campaigns in building resilience for ecosystems and communities