| Qualification Type: | PhD |
|---|---|
| Location: | Glasgow |
| Funding for: | UK Students |
| Funding amount: | Please refer to advert |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Placed On: | 19th March 2026 |
|---|---|
| Closes: | 30th April 2026 |
Project summary: Small-scale fishers in Scotland rely on the ocean, and their cultural practices are shaped by land and sea interactions. However, they have been negatively impacted by the climate crisis. The project uses community-based research to understand how fishing communities navigate the complex interplay between climate change, regulations, environment, and culture.
Start date: 1st October 2026
Deadline: 30th April
Duration: 36 months
Funding: Funded
Funding towards: Home fee
Stipend -UKRI stipend rate for UK students.
Funding details: Fully-funded scholarship for 3 years covers all university tuition fees (at UK level) and an annual tax-free stipend. International students are also eligible to apply, but they will need to find other funding sources to cover the difference between the home and international tuition fees. Exceptional international candidates may be provided funding for this difference.
Number of places: 1
Number of places extra: There will be a shortlisting and interview process.
RCUK eligibility: No
Eligibility:
Qualifications:
A minimum of a first-class or upper second-class undergraduate degree (or international equivalent) OR a Master's degree with a research component (MSc/MRes/MA), in a relevant discipline.
Skills:
For full details see advert: https://www.strath.ac.uk/studywithus/postgraduateresearchphdopportunities/business/workemploymentorganisation/navigatingpolycrisisclimatechangesmall-scalefishingcommunitiesinscotland/
Study modes eligibility: Full-time
Fee Status: Home
Project Details: Use this field to provide further details about the opportunity that aren’t covered elsewhere. This is a chance to expand on the ‘project summary’ field with more in-depth information about the opportunity.
The project will be based in Scotland, where small-scale fishers are crucial to the coastal economy, providing jobs, local food with a lower carbon footprint, and preserving cultural heritage. Climate change has had wide-ranging impacts on them, including disrupted fishing activities, reduced fishing productivity, loss of income, loss of cultural identity and social practices, and loss of coastal land. Scholars and policymakers tend to address the climate crisis as a single system, overlooking the interactions, entanglements, and mutually reinforcing dynamics among multiple crises that are faced by fishers, many of which are driven by global-scale stressors and create combined harms that are worse than each crisis in isolation. This research will combine a polycrisis perspective with a community-oriented approach to examine small-scale fishers and the climate crisis by identifying shared stresses, cascading effects, and systemic dynamics at both national and global levels. It will use a social cartography method, viewing coasts as fluid zones rather than fixed boundaries, to understand how communities navigate political, regulatory, environmental, and cultural complexities. Fishers from five Scottish regions will collaboratively map their changing work territories through workshops, highlighting stressors, and share their experiences and challenges via photos and photo-voice methods.
Primary Supervisor: Dr Pratima Sambajee.
Additional Supervisor/s: Dr Brian Garvey.
Further information: If there is any further information related to the opportunity you would like to include, please use this space to do so.
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