Major limb loss
Our academics are working to mitigate the cultural, organisational and technical challenges faced by patients suffering from major limb loss in post conflict settings in East Africa.
Search these pages to explore a selection of our directory of activities. You can use the keyword search and filter buttons to discover how we are addressing each of the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals and the five priorities in our Social Responsibility and Civic Engagement Plan. You can also filter activities by location and function.
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Our academics are working to mitigate the cultural, organisational and technical challenges faced by patients suffering from major limb loss in post conflict settings in East Africa.
Our School of Environment, Education and Development regularly conduct #Huckathon sessions to engage hundreds of volunteers to remotely map hidden villages, roads and dwellings to target health interventions.
Our School of Environment, Education and Development and Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health worked with partners in Kenya to undertake initial surveys and set up a campaign to engage more than 200,000 people to change behaviour and improve knowledge surrounding coronavirus and the use of face masks.
Our Humanising Healthcare initiative embeds community service and engagement within dentistry, pharmacy and optometry programmes. It supports students to deliver essential healthcare and education to communities as part of the curriculum. It also encourages global volunteering and the development of civic values and skills in the future health workforce.
Our Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health has successfully established the Action on Antibiotic Drug Resistance: One Student. One Campus. One World programme. We’re now working to create a wider student-led network with other universities in the north-west and across Africa.
We have the UK’s largest medical school and are the biggest provider of graduate healthcare professionals to the NHS in England’s north-west. We also offer pioneering professional programmes in areas including global health, humanitarianism and international healthcare leadership.
Our academics are part of a collaboration to improve cardiovascular care in Indonesia. The team trained local health workers (kaders) on cardiovascular disease, risk factors and the technical use of an app called SMARThealth, benefiting 48,000 people.
In northern India’s rural communities, increased exposure to high concentrations of arsenic and other chemicals found in groundwater has contributed to a rise in cancer and cardiovascular disease, adding to the public health inequalities and poor health outcomes of the region. Our Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences has shown the importance of rice as an exposure route for inorganic arsenic where microbes promote its release from materials such as sand and silt. This research led to recommendations focusing on rice selection and preparation techniques, highlighting the dangers of groundwater irrigation.
Our student-run, campus zero waste shop, Want Not Waste, holds a community fridge. This contains food from unsold meals offered by local business and surplus raw ingredients provided by our catering outlets. Stocking these items combats local food waste while helping to tackle food insecurity within our own university community.
We support the Kindling Trust, a local organisation aiming to combat climate change, biodiversity loss, and economic inequity, by challenging and subverting the industrial food system. We buy vegetables through Kindling’s operatives and have taken shares in Kindling Farm – a new blueprint for fair, organic and ecological farming.
Our Take a Bite out of Climate Change partnership aims to share the scientific consensus about how food and agriculture contribute to climate change. It funds easily accessible information and fun activities for citizens such as Climate Food Flashcards, Farming for the Future workshops and the free e-book Food and Climate Change – Without the Hot Air.
Since its inception in 2013, the UK’s first student-led and campus-based foodbank, Manchester Central Foodbank, has helped thousands of local citizens with food insecurity. This included developing an online store and delivery system for vulnerable and isolated people, and providing 70,000 meals during the pandemic in 2020.
Our BA Geography students undertake a Food and Farming unit covering hunger, ethical consumerism, environmental sustainability, animal rights and social equity. Biosciences undergraduates take a Plants for the Future unit exploring how plant biology can address social and environmental challenges. Through a Green Biotechnology unit, students engage with the latest developments in sustainable food production, energy generation and pharmaceutical production.
Our Department of Electrical and Electronic Engineering is examining how electronic engineering can improve food supply and sustainable energy production without increased pressures on our land. E-Agri Manchester is using e-devices for reducing waste, increasing yields and making crops more resilient. We also work on sustainable agriculture with the eight most research-intensive universities in the north of England through an N8 AgriFood programme.
Our Global Development Institute has examined whether cultivating in groups – by voluntarily pooling land, labour, funds and skills and sharing costs and benefits – enables small farmers to create larger, more profitable enterprises in South Asia and beyond. The research in Kerala, south India showed that carefully structured group farming created sustainable, food-secure livelihoods for vast numbers of poor women farmers.
A significant proportion of our students are from families that fall below the national poverty line. We offer a range of support to ensure that financial issues don’t present an obstacle for learners, including:
Our academics are exploring the impact of austerity on reproduction. The project uses a range of creative activities and interviews with women from areas in the north-east, where there are significant socio-economic barriers. This project is providing new insights into contemporary austerity and how this may affect childbearing.
Our student community work on a range of projects to tackle extreme poverty and inequality. Love for the Streets was established by two Manchester students to use youth events, content and social media marketing to tackle homelessness in partnership with local charities. Once a Month fights period poverty through public campaigns and providing sanitary products to vulnerable women across Manchester.
The Homeless Healthcare Society helps improve the healthcare of Manchester’s homeless population by raising awareness of the medical inequalities and stigmas faced by homeless patients when accessing healthcare. The aim is to ultimately improve the care provided by tomorrow’s healthcare professionals.
Team Rwanda is a partnership between The University of Manchester, the University of Rwanda and Azizi Life. Students volunteer their time assisting several schemes to alleviate poverty and aid community development.
Our Global Development Institute is the UK’s largest university-based postgraduate centre specialising in international development. More than 5,000 students have completed master’s programmes in international development since 2012.
Our Inclusive Growth Analysis Unit was supported by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation to analyse evidence about the scale of poverty and inequality in our city region. It has recommended a range of policies on inclusive growth so that economic prosperity benefits all citizens across Greater Manchester and beyond.
Working with Manchester City Council, Cracking Good Food, Save the Children, Oxfam and other charities, our Cathie Marsh Institute for Social Research and Institute for Collaborative Research on Ageing conducted pioneering research to document food insecurity in the UK following the economic recession. We studied homelessness, street begging, food-bank use and financial difficulties faced by older women, and developed a pilot tool for helping older people with their nutrition. Our research influenced the political debate on food insecurity and raised awareness of the issue in the media.
Based in our University’s Students’ Union, the Big Change Society supports people who are homeless by paying for essential items such as home deposits, training courses and clothes for job interviews. The society also signposts students towards the best ways they can get involved with ending homelessness and promoting responsible giving.
We’ve supported more than 4,000 local people into work through our unique partnership with the Manchester Growth Company on the initiative, The Works.
Major limb loss
Community mapping
Protecting Kenyan communities against COVID-19
Humanising Healthcare
Antibiotic guardians
Health and wellbeing study programmes
Preventing cardiovascular disease through smart technologies
Tackling groundwater arsenic and health inequalities in India
Community Fridge
Kindling Trust
Take a Bite out of Climate Change
Manchester Central Foodbank
Sustainable food study programmes
Sustainable agriculture through electronic engineering
Creating sustainable livelihoods through group farming
Student financial support
Reproduction and austerity
Student action
Homeless Healthcare Society
Team Rwanda
International development study programmes
Inclusive growth in Greater Manchester
Food insecurity in the UK
Big Change Society
The Works