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The Round Table Hodson Committee was delighted to receive over 120 applications for the Round Table Commonwealth Awards. The Deadline for applications has now passed.
Six students from UK universities have been selected for the prestigious Round Table
Commonwealth Awards for Young Scholars.
As part of the Round Table's centenary celebrations, Melanie Bunce, Asa Cusack,
Stacey Glennie, Alexander Henderson, Aileen Quinn and Lindsay Scorgie, will each
receive a £1,000 award, a three-week research grant to another Commonwealth
country, and the opportunity to have their final work published in Britain’s oldest
international affairs journal.
The award-winners, who range from undergraduate to PhD level, will travel to the
Commonwealth countries of Australia, Ghana, Jamaica, Kenya, Uganda and Zambia.
Their diverse research areas include the role of women in Ghana’s independence
movement, the response of Australia’s Masonic lodges to the First World War, and
the production of international news stories on conflict in Africa.
Dr. Venkat Iyer, Editor of the Round Table, commended the award-winners: "I am
delighted that, in its 100th year, the Round Table is supporting six exceptional students
who will introduce a Commonwealth perspective into their existing research. This
year is also the 60th anniversary of the modern Commonwealth, and with 60% of the
Commonwealth's population under 30 years of age, the Round Table believes that it is
essential to help students understand the relevance of the Commonwealth as a values
based organisation. We’re very grateful to the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth
Office for its generous sponsorship of this scheme and we look forward very much to
seeing the award-winners' work."
Notes to Editors:
Further details of the winning candidates are noted below. To contact the awardwinners
through the Round Table, or for more information on the centenary awards,
please contact Daisy Cooper or Zoë Ware at roundtablecentenary@hotmail.co.uk
Journalists are kindly requested to acknowledge the financial support of £20,000
provided by the UK's Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
Founded in 1910, The Round Table, Britain's oldest international affairs journal,
provides analysis and commentary on all aspects of international affairs. The journal
is the major source for coverage of the policy issues concerning the contemporary
Commonwealth and its role in international affairs, with occasional articles on themes
of historical interest. The Round Table has for many years been a repository of
informed scholarship, opinion, and judgement regarding both international relations in
general, and the Commonwealth in particular, with authorship and readership drawn
from the worlds of government, business, finance and academia.
In celebration of the centenary of The Round Table: The Commonwealth Journal of
International Affairs and the 60th anniversary of the modern Commonwealth, the
Round Table Commonwealth Awards for Young Scholars will be awarded to six
students from Commonwealth countries studying at a UK University in the academic
year 2008-9. The centenary awards aim to enhance understanding of the modern
Commonwealth among UK universities and enable six students to contribute to
academic literature on the relevance of the modern Commonwealth in the 21st
Century.
Award-winners:
Lindsay Scorgie (Canadian): Uganda
Lindsay Scorgie is a PhD student studying at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.
Her wider research concerns violence, and international responses to it, in the Great
Lakes region of central Africa. With her award, she will travel to Uganda to
investigate these issues. The Commonwealth, as one of a number of actors involved in
conflict prevention in the region, will be central to her research. In addition, questions
about the effects of Rwanda’s likely accession to the Commonwealth will be
considered.
Stacey Glennie (Canadian): Australia
Stacey Glennie is studying for a MA in International Relations at the LSE. Her
research considers the institution of Freemasonry and its response to the First World
War in Canada and Britain, this award will allow her to extend her research to
Australia, where she will focus on the Masonic Museum in Sydney. Her work will
show how international organizations, be they fraternal, religious or otherwise, have
been and continue to be both a reflection of and a promoter of Commonwealth ties
and in doing so, it will expose many of the shared values and core beliefs which have
long pulled individuals from diverse Commonwealth countries together. At the same
time, it will shed light on the myriad of ways in which the Commonwealth and its
meaning for ordinary citizens has changed over the past century.
Aileen Quinn (British): Ghana
Aileen Quinn is studying for an MA in Cultural History at the University of
Manchester. Her research focuses on the history of women's involvement in the
National Liberation Movement in the Gold Coast/Ghana. On her visit she hopes to
highlight the importance of women in Commonwealth politics both historically and in
the contemporary era. She will use the Republic of Ghana Public Records and
Archive Administration Department (PRAAD) in Accra, and regional archives in
Kumasi. She also hopes to conduct interviews with Ghanaians, including those who
were involved in the independence movement and women now involved in Ghanaian
politics, in order to gage perceptions of the past and how gender roles have changed in
the past 50 years.
Asa Cusack (British): Jamaica
Asa Cusack is an MA (and soon to be PhD) student studying Politics and International
Relations at the University of Sheffield. His research considers the role of ideas in the
creation of regional economic and political units, and focuses particularly on the
Caribbean. He will produce a comparative study of Jamaica's membership of
CARICOM and the Commonwealth and consider politico-economic, and ideological
reasons for membership.
Alexander Henderson (South African): Zambia
Alexander Henderson is an undergraduate student studying History and War Studies
at Kings College, University of London. His is researching Zambia's post-colonial
foreign policy, and particularly Kaunda’s support for independence movements in
neighbouring countries. He hopes to show the effects of this policy on contemporary
Zambia and its current international relations. In addition, he will focus on the role of
the Commonwealth in regional southern African politics, through Commonwealth
policies and through the accession of Mozambique to the association. Whilst in
Zambia he hopes to consult government archives and conduct interviews with
politicians and academics.
Melanie Bunce (New Zealander): Kenya
Melanie Bunce is studying for a Dphil entitled: Journalism in crises: The production
of international news stories on conflict in Africa at the University of Oxford. She
will travel to Nairobi, the capital for foreign reporters reporting on North and East
Africa and conduct in-depth interviews with journalists, and the sources that journalist
use (academics, politicians, aid-workers etc). She will consider the ways that the news
media effects understanding of other countries, feeding into political and policy
decisions, and will ask whether there is a special obligation for members of the
Commonwealth to report on events in fellow Commonwealth countries.
Press Release: PDF version
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