Time Team archaeologist joins the University of Lincoln

Carenza

Leading archaeologist, lecturer and television presenter Carenza Lewis is to join the University of Lincoln, UK, in a new role connecting the public with cutting edge research in the arts and humanities.

Renowned in the academic fields of history, archaeology and landscape studies, Professor Lewis is also a familiar face to television audiences, having featured on the much-loved Channel 4 series Time Team. The award-winning programme, which ran for 20 series from 1994 – 2013, followed original excavations and archaeological studies, gaining critical and popular acclaim for its presentation of archaeological investigation to the general public.

Professor Lewis comes to Lincoln from the University of Cambridge, where she has been teaching for more than 15 years, having previously been an archaeological investigator for the Royal Commission on Historical Monuments of England.

Professor Lewis, who will work across Lincoln’s College of Arts as Professor of Public Understanding of Research from September 2015, said: “I am absolutely delighted to be joining the University of Lincoln, where I will be able to develop and expand my long-standing commitment to involving people beyond academia in exciting and important research projects. Lincoln is a dynamic, inspiring and outward-looking academic institution whose aims absolutely chime with my own, with the added bonus of being based in a wonderfully historic city.”

Professor Lewis brings with her a wealth of experience derived from academic research, television and leading public engagement initiatives at Cambridge. As part of a campaign to widen access to higher education, she launched Access Cambridge Archaeology (ACA) in 2004 – an innovative unit intended to develop skills and enhance personal well-being through active participation in archaeology, involving people of all ages and backgrounds from across the UK.

Professor Matthew Cragoe, Pro Vice Chancellor for the College of Arts at the University of Lincoln, said: “Carenza has a tremendous track record of engaging the public with academic research and breaking down the barriers between the academy and the wider community. At a time when universities are increasingly measured on the practical impact of their research this is a powerful statement of Lincoln’s ambition.”

In her new role at Lincoln, Professor Lewis will also continue her own historical research in Lincoln’s School of History & Heritage. She said: “I am looking forward to continuing my studies into the archaeology of medieval Britain and the history of childhood. My current work is exploring the historic development of rural communities, the impact of global events such as the Black Death and the lives of children in the past – fascinating subjects which are relevant to all of us today.”

Professor Lewis, who also presented Story of England and Great British Story on BBC2 in 2010 and 2012, was shortlisted in 2009 for the Marsh Archaeology Award for her contribution to public archaeology.
Article written by Elizabeth Allen – PR Officer

Participants needed for new Psychology research project

Clearing

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy – Participants needed!

The research aims to investigate the validity and reliability of an Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) process measure we have developed.

Participants are asked to rate items from this measure and other measures of distress and quality of life.

The measures should take around 20 minutes to complete and there is the potential to win either £100 or £50 in a cash prize draw.

Those who are interested can find out more via https://lincolnpsych.eu.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_9BsrXOqyiqrXXdH and you can also complete the survey through this link.

Ashley Francis (first year trainee)

The Times / Herbert Smith Freehills Advocacy Competition 2015

phone

Our lives have been transformed by the digital revolution of the past two decades. But the promise of Utopia has now turned sour in a bleak landscape of trolls, intrusive advertising and Big Brother surveillance. So the question for entrants to this year’sTimes Advocacy Competition sponsored by Herbert Smith Freehills is ‘Do we need a new Magna Carta for the Digital Age?’

The competition is open to all students registered with a UK academic institution and there are prizes worth £6,500  – a king’s ransom back in 1215 when an overbearing King John was compelled to acknowledge that his subjects had rights and that he himself must abide by the law.

Entrants must submit a 400 word skeleton argument together with a 90 second YouTube presentation to sum up their case by Monday 20th July, details on how to enter can be found below. A shortlist of four candidates will then be invited to the Grand Final to take place in a prestigious London venue on the 16th September 2015.

Visit http://www.herbertsmithfreehills.com/careers/london/graduates/student-advocacy-competition for details