Job description
Organisation/Company Swansea University Department Central Research Field History » Local history History » Other Researcher Profile First Stage Researcher (R1) Positions PhD Positions Application Deadline 22 May 2026 - 11:59 (Europe/London) Country United Kingdom Type of Contract Temporary Job Status Full-time Hours Per Week 35 Offer Starting Date 1 Oct 2026 Is the job funded through the EU Research Framework Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No
Offer DescriptionAmgueddfa Cymru (AC) and its Natural Science collections, comprising botanical, zoological and geological specimens, carry within them echoes of the British Empire. Although the Museum itself was not established until the twentieth century, several collections predate its foundation and reflect the collecting practices and erasure of the labour of indigenous and other non-privileged workers characteristic of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century natural history. Some collections came from overseas in the 1920s and 1930s, as part of efforts to gather the material resources of the empire, to understand them, to better exploit them, and display imperial power and wealth. Colonial associations came in many guises. Certain museum officials had direct commercial or personal links to the colonies. Others were indirectly linked through inherited family wealth, acquired via trade with the colonies, which they used to build extensive collections subsequently donated to the Museum.
Individual collectors closely linked to the colonies include George Henry Douglas Pennant (1876-1915) who donated several African trophy heads, and whose inherited wealth derived from Jamaican sugar plantations and exploitation of the enslaved. David Davies (1880-1944), Welsh politician, also gifted African hunting trophies. J. C. Melvill (1845-1929), grandson of the last secretary of the East India Company, and director of a firm of East India and China cotton merchants, collected molluscs and vascular plants. Some collectors were involved during the nascent years of the Museum, as trustees, council members, or patrons. T. W. Proger (1860-1947), museum council member and naturalist, had business interests in the Falkland Islands, and collected there and in other European colonies in the Americas. Proger's specimens are found across the Natural Science collections.
Key Research Questions
How did individuals associated with British colonies shape the early development of AC and its Natural Science collections?
What evidence of these entanglements remains in the collections and associated documentation?
How can Community Action Research methods develop new perspectives on these 'echoes of empire', which can be reflected in collections documentation and interpretation?
Can Natural Science collections help diasporic or migrant communities and refugees (DMCRs), recognise and safeguard their Intangible Cultural Heritage (ICH)?
Can new and strengthened partnerships with museums in former colonies contribute to a deeper understanding of the cultural significance of specimens held by AC, provide new insights into collecting practices, and promote collaborative curatorial projects?
Can this engagement with DMCRs and source communities make the Museum more attractive to, and inclusive of, diverse audiences, and inform wider practice and policy?
The student will play an active part in shaping the project in terms of their disciplinary or trans-disciplinary perspectives, materials and historical themes within the collection, and geographic and temporal range.
IELTS 6.5 Overall (with no individual component below 6.5) or Swansea University recognised equivalent.
Additional InformationThis scholarship covers the full cost of tuition fees and an annual stipend at UKRI rate (currently £21,805 for October 2026).
This studentship also receives an enhanced stipend of £600 per annum.
Additional research expenses of up to £750 per year will also be available.
Eligibility CriteriaNote for International and European ApplicantsIf you have any questions regarding your academic or fee eligibility based on the above, please email pgrscholarships@swansea.ac.uk with the web-link to the scholarship(s) you are interested in.
PhD RequirementsApplicants for PhD must hold an undergraduate degree at 2.1 level and a master's degree with a minimum overall grade at 'Merit'. Alternatively, applicants with a UK first class honours degree (or non-UK equivalent as defined by Swansea University) not holding a master's degree, will be considered on an individual basis.
Selection ProcessPlease see our website for more information.
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Extra information
- Status
- Open
- Education Level
- Secondary School
- Location
- Swansea
- Type of Contract
- Full-time jobs
- Published at
- 15-05-2026
- Full UK/EU driving license preferred
- No
- Car Preferred
- No
- Must be eligible to work in the EU
- No
- Cover Letter Required
- No
- Languages
- English
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