Humanities Research Institute

Humanities Research Institute

Founded in 2008, The University of ³Ô¹ÏÍø’s Humanities Research Institute exists to bring together internationally distinguished scholars working in the field of the humanities, to support their research, and to engage them in the life of the University.

The Institute’s Fellows and Visiting Professors are drawn from a wide variety of disciplines but have notable concentrations in the areas of military history and security studies, political history, the history of art and connoisseurship, and nineteenth-century literature and social history.

List of Fellows

The Institute is composed of some thirty Fellows in various categories and supports a series of Visiting Professorships, with a particular focus in history, history of art, modern war studies and international relations. Click here for the listing of current Fellows, which also provides short biographies and details of major and recent publications.

Seminars for graduate research students

The Humanities Research Institute’s seminars are open to all research students and faculty in the University, subject only to the constraints of space. If you are interested in attending a seminar, please email the Humanities Research Secretary (seminars-hri@buckingham.ac.uk) stating which seminar you would like to attend. Please also include its date in your message.

Collaborations

The Institute actively promotes academic and inter-disciplinary collaboration with other leading institutions, and over recent years has worked in association with the Wallace Collection, London, in the development of teaching and research in the study of the decorative arts and curatorship; with the Royal Military Academy, Sandhurst, in the development of the University’s new research programme in Modern War Studies; and with the Royal United Services Institute in the production of a major policy paper examining the lessons of history for the formulation of contemporary British strategy.

Research degrees in the School of Humanities.