Irish universities secure six prestigious European research grants

Trinity, NUIG and Maynooth secure funding from ‘gold standard’ of academic research

At NUI Galway, Laoise McNamara received funding for the study of Bone disease; and Dimitrios Zeugolis for research on cellular tissue.
At NUI Galway, Laoise McNamara received funding for the study of Bone disease; and Dimitrios Zeugolis for research on cellular tissue.

Irish universities have secured six out of just over 300 lucrative European research grants which are awarded to the continent’s top scientists and scholars.

The Irish performance is an improvement on the last round when there was just a single European Research Council (ERC) grant winner from Ireland.

This prompted calls by Irish universities for an overhaul of Government funding for research and higher education.

The council on Tuesday announced the winners of its latest grants – worth some €600 million – which are considered the gold standard for research in Europe.

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In Ireland, Trinity College Dublin secured three grants, NUI Galway two and Maynooth University one.

At Trinity, the grant winners included Conor Buckley for research on personalised medicine; Matthew Campbell for investigating macular degeneration; and Redmond O'Connell for researching perceptual decision-making.

At NUI Galway, Laoise McNamara received funding for the study of Bone disease; and Dimitrios Zeugolis for research on cellular tissue.

Maynooth University's Delia Ferri received €2 million research funding for investigating how EU Law protects the rights of persons with disabilities to fully participate in cultural endeavours.

Of the 300 ERC grantees, the country which received the most grants was Germany (52 grants), the United Kingdom (50), France (43) and the Netherlands (32).

Ireland was in 14th place with six awards, the same as Austria, followed by Finland (5) and Portugal (4).

The research projects proposed by the new grantees cover a wide range of topics in physical sciences and engineering, life sciences, as well as social sciences and humanities.

Maynooth University’s Delia Ferri will lead a team of five people as part of her project.
Maynooth University’s Delia Ferri will lead a team of five people as part of her project.

Job creation

Overall, the ERC received 2,453 research proposals this time, out of which approximately 12 per cent will be funded. Thirty-one per cent of grants were awarded to female applicants.

This new round of grants will create an estimated 2,000 jobs for postdoctoral fellows, PhD students and other staff working in grantees’ research teams.

For example, Dr Ferri, a lecturer in the Maynooth University, will lead a team of five researchers on her project.

The team will also include dancers, choreographers and a filmmaker to develop the artistic elements of the project.

She said she was “delighted” to receive the grant which she hoped will ultimately lead to a new understanding of the legal concept of cultural diversity within EU law.

“This research comes at a crucially important time, 10 years after the ratification of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities by the EU and has the possibility to make a real difference in the lives of those with a disability,” she said.

Maynooth University president Prof Philip Nolan congratulated Dr Ferri and said her work was "very much core to the ethos of Maynooth University, and it's wonderful to see such valuable scholarship receive the support it deserves."

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien

Carl O'Brien is Education Editor of The Irish Times. He was previously chief reporter and social affairs correspondent