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Interdisciplinarity between the arts and humanities and the health sciences: Funding applications – next steps & planning

Somerset House East Wing, Strand Campus, London

 

The Digital Futures Institute’s Centre for Technology and the Body is running a series of workshops in 2025 to foster interdisciplinary collaboration between the arts and humanities and health sciences at King’s College London. The series aims to create a space for research relationships, mentoring, and partnership building that leads to future funding bids.

The final of our four workshops, will focus on funding applications – next steps and planning.

This is an in-person only workshop, and is open to researchers working in the arts and humanities and the health sciences. We also have a limited number of spaces for final year doctoral research students from these disciplines: if you are a final year doctoral student and would like to attend, please contact digitalfutures@kcl.ac.uk directly to book. You do not need to have attended previous workshops to join this one – please do come along if you are interested!

Convenors: Professor Fay Bound Alberti (History, Director of the Centre for Technology and the Body) and Dr Lili Golmohammadi (Methodologies, Florence Nightingale Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery, and Palliative Care).

Location: Inigo Rooms, Somerset House East Wing, WC2R 2LS

Lunch and refreshments will be provided.

For inquiries or requests, please contact digitalfutures@kcl.ac.uk.

The Centre for Technology and the Body is part of the Digital Futures institute that explores how we live well with technology. We welcome collaborative, critical investigation of the history, present and future of technology, and how it intersects with our physical, sensory, and emotional worlds.

By registering for this event, you consent to being added to the Digital Futures Institute mailing list. The Institute will never share your details with third parties. To unsubscribe, please email digitalfutures@kcl.ac.uk.

At this event

Fay Bound Alberti

Professor in Modern History

Lili  Golmohammadi

Research Associate


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