| Location: | Coventry, University of Warwick, Warwick |
|---|---|
| Salary: | £35,608 to £46,049 per annum, pro rata |
| Hours: | Part Time |
| Contract Type: | Fixed-Term/Contract |
| Placed On: | 3rd July 2026 |
|---|---|
| Closes: | 23rd July 2026 |
| Job Ref: | 111629-0726 |
Position Type - Fixed Term
Duration - Fixed-term contract for 12 months
Hours - 29.2 hours per week (0.8 FTE)
Informal Queries
Flexible Working
About the Role
The Institute for Global Sustainable Development at the University of Warwick is recruiting a postdoctoral research assistant to undertake research to support the work of the British Academy funded Building Resilience through Equitable Action on Temperature, Heat, and indoor Emissions (BREATHE) research project.
The key duties of the PDRA will be to assist the Principal Investigator to develop scientific publications related to project research, undertake some administrative duties, and, where appropriate, assist and collaborate with other project collaborators in the successful execution of the project.
Building Resilience through Equitable Action on Temperature, Heat, and indoor Emissions (BREATHE) is a two-year research project led by Dr. Hita Unnikrishnan at The University of Warwick, and co-led by Dr. Lavanya Suresh (BITS-Pilani, Hyderabad Campus), Dr. Manik Gupta (BITS-Pilani, Hyderabad Campus), and Dr. Deepshikha Batheja (One Health Trust).
BREATHE investigates how historical and intersectional inequalities influence differential experiences of heat stress and indoor air pollution (IAP) among members of peri-urban households within the global south. It works with the hypothesis that women and vulnerable members of traditionally patriarchal households are likely to experience intensified effects of heat stress and IAP than their male counterparts. This inequality in lived experiences, we argue, is due to intersections between patriarchal norms that transform households into secondary gendered spaces of production, perpetuation of colonial architectural ideals, and usage of unclean cooking fuels within these homes.
Interdisciplinary BREATHE investigates this intersection for the very first time by combining historical research with large household surveys, satellite data analysis and machine learning models in two heat stressed, peri-urban regions of South Indian Karnataka (Bidar, Chikkaballapur districts). Working with different stakeholders in these regions, BREATHE will both facilitate and autoethnographically analyze processes and barriers to co-creating equitable climate futures.
Unfortunately, due to the nature of the funding, the project cannot provide sponsorship for a visa granting entitlement to work in the UK and so the role is open only to those with an existing right to work in the UK.
About You
Preference will be given to scholars working at the intersection of environmental history, political ecology, climate change, and resilience. Familiarity with global south contexts (particularly India) will be preferred.
Experience or interest in podcasting, mapping, and webpage design would be an advantage.
Closing Deadline: Thursday 23 July 2026 at 11:55pm (UK Time)*
Full details of the duties and selection criteria for this role can be found in the vacancy advert on the University of Warwick's jobs pages. You will be routed to this when you click on the 'Apply' button.
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