Tuesday, May 04 2021
Closing Date for Applications: 23 May 2021
Anticipated Interview Date: 14 June 2021
Applications are invited for a fully-funded three year PhD, with opportunities for visiting scholarships in Hong Kong and Mainland China, to commence in October 2021.
In 2019 Lloyd’s Register (LR) celebrated 150 years of operation in China. This doctoral-level research project will assess the influence and impact that LR and its surveyors had on international understandings of health, safety, and risk management, and their broader influences on local infrastructures and imperial cultural knowledge between the years 1869-1918.
This exciting opportunity includes an annual stipend at the UKRI rate and a generous travel allowance for the student to conduct national and international research.
The PhD is funded by Lloyd’s Register Foundation (LRF) and supported by the University of Portsmouth’s Port Towns and Urban Cultures (PTUC) research group in the School of Area Studies, History, Politics and Literature. The visiting scholarship in 2023 is supported by Hong Kong Baptist University (HKBU) and Dalian Maritime University (DMU), who will host the student as a visiting scholar. An international conference will be co-hosted by HKBU in Hong Kong during summer 2023.
The PhD will be based in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, and will be supervised by Dr Matthew Heaslip, Dr Melanie Bassett and Professor Brad Beaven.
By working on this project you’ll:
‘Lloyd’s Register Surveyors in China, 1869-1918’ will critically assess the role of LR in developing cultural and scientific exchanges during a formative phase in Anglo-Chinese relations.
The company sent surveyors around the globe to record standards of international ships. Surveyors sent comprehensive reports to their London office, which would often detail how they settled themselves in to their new surroundings and became involved in aspects of local life. They, therefore, became key agents for spreading British culture and values throughout the globe. In addition to understanding how the surveyor operated and in what context, the PhD will inform a burgeoning field within maritime history concerned with health, safety and risk management. The original contribution of this research will fuse the nuances of imperial networking and socialisation with the application of a ‘western’ preoccupation with safety and the negation of risk in shipping and shipbuilding. Thus, the PhD will highlight the process of knowledge exchange and provide historic analysis of the ways in which LR Foundation met its challenges: ‘Safety at Sea’, ‘Skills for safety’, and the ‘Public Understanding of Risk’.
The ‘Lloyd’s Register PhD Bursary’ includes full fees, bursary, and an additional travel bursary to support international research and dissemination. The successful candidate will help to develop teaching and learning materials, co-organise an international postgraduate conference in Hong Kong, and undertake visiting scholarships at Hong Kong Baptist University and Dalian Maritime University in 2023 (Covid-19-permitting). Lloyd’s Register Foundation’s Heritage and Education Centre (HEC) is undertaking extensive digitization of their collection which will be exclusively available to the PhD student. The candidate will also be mentored and collaborate with the HEC on a number of public outreach and access resources which will bridge the gaps between the ‘academy’, the institution (LRF), and the public.
We’d encourage you to contact Dr Matthew Heaslip to discuss your interest before you apply, quoting the project code.
When you are ready to apply, you can use the online application form. Make sure you submit a personal statement, proof of your degrees and grades, details of two referees, proof of your English language proficiency and an up-to-date CV. The ‘How to Apply’ page offers further guidance on the PhD application process.
If you want to be considered for this funded PhD opportunity you must quote project code SASH6300521 when applying.