UK Government to fund international Covid-19 studies in Scotland
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The UK Government is investing £7.2 million in twenty research
projects across the UK, including the universities of Edinburgh and
Strathclyde, to help provide developing countries with sustainable
solutions to respond to Covid-19 and future pandemics. One of these
projects, led by the University of Edinburgh’s Dr Thomas Molony,
will receive £367,000 to investigate the...Request free trial
The UK Government is investing £7.2 million in twenty research projects across the UK, including the universities of Edinburgh and Strathclyde, to help provide developing countries with sustainable solutions to respond to Covid-19 and future pandemics. One of these projects, led by the University of Edinburgh’s Dr Thomas Molony, will receive £367,000 to investigate the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on elections in Africa. Working in partnership with colleagues in the Central African Republic, Ghana and Tanzania, the study will find ways to protect the electorate from Covid-19 transmission. The project team - comprising of country specialists, leading public health researchers, and election experts - plan to investigate multiple stages of each election, tracking patterns of turnout and using surveys (with gender-balanced samples) to investigate attitudes towards voting so that any emergent gender inequality is highlighted. The University of Strathclyde project, led by Dr Pratima Sambajee, will receive £199,579 in funding to look at how Covid-19 has impacted workers’ rights in Mauritius and how improvements can be made. The hardest hit are workers in tourism and hospitality, textile factories and the informal economy. Examples include reduced compensation, withholding of workers’ annual leave and exemption from negotiations with workers’ organisations (unions) by employers prior to reduction of the workforce. UK Government Minster for Scotland, Iain Stewart said:
UK Business Secretary Alok Sharma said:
Dr Thomas Molony, Director, Centre of African Studies at Edinburgh University said:
Other projects receiving UK Government funding include delivering mass vaccination capacity in Bangladesh, protective equipment for refugees in Jordan and remote healthcare access for patients in Nigeria. The £7.2 million UK government funding will be managed by UK aid programmes, the Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) and the Newton Fund. The funding follows the launch of the government’s ambitious R&D Roadmap in July, which committed to boosting international collaboration in research and development and establishing global scientific partnerships that will create health, social and economic benefits across the world. |
