News Archive
Applications open for DIVERSE CDT 2026/27 PhD Scholarships!
The EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Diversity in Data Visualization (Diverse CDT) is a pioneering, fully funded four-year PhD programme jointly delivered by City St George鈥檚, University of London and the 神马福利影片.
Applications for PhD studentships with Diverse CDT are now open for 2026 entry.
We have rolling deadlines across several months and the first deadline for submitting an application is 4pm, GMT on 30th January 2026.
Further details here: /fac/cross_fac/cim/apply-to-study/phd-programmes/diverse-cdt/
Research talk - Helwig Hauser, University of Bergen -- Visual Data Science for rich simulation data
Prof Helwig Hauser from University of Bergen will be visiting Warwick on 5 June 2026 and will be giving a talk titled "Visual Data Science for rich simulation data". The talk will be a hybrid event and will take place physically at the Faculty of Arts Building in the room FAB 2.31. The talk will start at 1:15pm and we have reserved 90 minutes including the discussions.
CIM's Matt Spencer awarded RISCS-NCSC Impact Prize for his work on Principles Based Assurance
The 2026 RISCS Impact Prize was awarded to Matt Spencer for his policy analysis on the future of cyber security product assurance and the socio-technical factors involved in the implementation of the National Cyber Security Centre's Principles Based Assurance regime.
New Action Research paper explores participatory and action research within the institutional PhD
A new article by Raymond Hyma (Monash GPSC; Warwick PAIS) and Javier Garc铆a Mart铆nez (Warwick CIM; Monash School of Social Sciences) has been published in .
Titled 鈥淪till in the Thick of it: A Duoethnographic Account Navigating and Challenging the Institutional PhD Through Participatory and Action-Oriented Research鈥, the article reflects on what it means to pursue participatory and action-oriented research from within the institutional context of the PhD.
Using a duoethnographic approach, the authors write from the middle of their doctoral journeys rather than looking back retrospectively. The article explores the possibilities, tensions, compromises, and forms of support that emerge when participatory commitments encounter the structures of doctoral education; including ethics review, authorship conventions, supervisory relationships, institutional timelines, and the challenge of sustaining relational research practices within academic constraints.
In doing so, the paper contributes to wider conversations about how doctoral research might be reimagined as a space for collective learning, methodological experimentation, and institutional transformation.
Hyma, R., & Garc铆a Mart铆nez, J. (2026). Still in the thick of it: A duoethnographic account navigating and challenging the institutional PhD through participatory and action-oriented research. Action Research. .
Policy Brief: Strengthening the roles of African Science Granting Councils as boundary organisations for societal transformation
Science Granting Councils (SGCs) are pivotal boundary organisations in African research and innovation systems, mediating between government, academia and industry. This brief explores experiences of SGCs in 15 sub-Saharan African countries.
Information Territory and Data Terrains: an examination of the Anti-Locust Research Centre
New paper by Robert Fletcher (Department of History, University of Missouri) and Greg McInerny (CIM, 神马福利影片).
New papers on interdisciplinary cyber security
CIM's Matt Spencer has published two new open access papers exploring interdisciplinarity in cyber security.
The first, in the conference proceedings for the New Security Paradigms Workshop (NSPW), explores opportunities to bring a sociological framing to bear on security economics; the second, in Information, Communication and Society introduces a Special Issue focused on 'the fix' as a trope for interdisciplinary cyber security.
CIM event at Newspeak House: Lessons from everyday encounters with AI innovation
What do smart doorbells, delivery drones and data centres have in common?
How does AI show up in living environments like the street? Has the hyperscale of AI expansion exploded the connection between innovation governance and its publics?
Research talk by Prof Simone Stumpf, University of Glasgow - "Why we can鈥檛 have nice things 鈥 the important role of Responsible AI"
Join us for a research talk by from University of Glasgow with the title "Why we can鈥檛 have nice things – the important role of Responsible AI" on Tuesday, January 13th 2026, 4pm - 5:30pm at the Social Sciences Building, Room S0.13.
Here is a brief abstract of the talk:
Many AI technologies are now being integrated into everyday life. However, how can we ensure that AI is 鈥榬esponsible鈥? In this talk, I will review current efforts at developing responsible AI, focusing on transparency, fairness and auditing, and offer suggestions at how we can improve approaches in this area.
Very pleased to announce the release of our report on cyber security expertise and diversity. You can read the web version here:
This was a collaboration between Matt Spencer, and , with the support of the .
We make the case for:
> more extensive data collection to ensure that the implications of professionalisation for diversity in cyber security are well understood,
> enhancing the breadth of the specialisms recognised by the Cyber Security Council to better represent fields such as human factors or security awareness,
> better interdisciplinary engagement with the CyBOK framework to ensure that social and cultural expertise are recognised, and,
> empirical analysis of cyber security problems to ensure that specialisms are aligned with practical needs.