Economic and Social Research Council Studentship Funding (ESRC)

Entry
2025
Scholarships collections
Research Council Scholarships

The University of St Andrews offers two types of ESRC funded scholarships through the Scottish Graduate School of Social Science (SGSSS) to suitably qualified UK and international applicants:

  • 1+3 scholarships comprise a one year Masters degree followed by a three year doctoral degree
  • +3.5 scholarships comprise a three-and-a-half year doctoral degree

 Scholarships are available in the following Schools/Departments for projects aligned with the SGSSS disciplinary hubs and pathways:

Communication, AI and New Technologies

This challenge pathway is interested in processes, challenges and solutions associated with how we communicate with each other and how new technologies (including but not limited to AI) are reshaping our world and our interactions with it. We will take a broad approach to the terms above and the pathway may include research looking at, for example: patterns and mechanisms of language, communication and interaction in changing worlds, employment, and industrial implications of smart technologies; lived experiences of health-care technologies; addressing pedagogical and communicative challenges of AI.

Environment, Migration and Demographic Change

This challenge pathway is concerned with global and local processes relating to environment, migration and demographic change including problems and solutions pertaining to the green economy and biodiversity. The scope for the challenge-led pathway is correspondingly broad and might cover research including, for example: anthropological study of community experiences, differences in the psychology and behaviour of relevant groups, the challenges of longitudinal analysis of demographic data, the concept of the circular economy, sociological theories of othering, the politics and economics of just transitions.

Governance and Institutions

This challenge pathway is interested in how institutions form, operate and impact on lives globally, nationally, and locally. Institutions are meant in the broadest sense to include international bodies, corporations and religions, governments, arms-length institutions of the state, civil society organisations, formal and informal movements. These might be studied separately or in comparison.

Health, Wellbeing and Communities

This challenge pathway brings together interests in research about distributions of health and wellbeing across the lifespan; how mental and physical health and wellbeing are understood, experienced, challenged and strengthened at multi-scalar levels. The pathway is also concerned with the social, political and economic functioning of communities.

Securities: Justice, Economies and Conflict

This challenge pathway is concerned with the societal challenges thrown up by processes relating to justice, economies and conflict at global, national and local levels; on inter- and intra-state problems and resolutions. The scope for the challenge-led pathway is correspondingly broad and might cover research including, for example: comparative studies of justice systems in relation to specific areas of legislation; histories of conflict resolution in particular geographies; studies of macro-economic shocks.

Social Inequalities

This challenge pathway brings together interests in a range of social inequality problems separately or intersecting) at global and national and local levels and in actions to resolve these. The scope for the pathway is broad and could cover, for example, research on the following kinds of topic: understanding changing patterns of inequality using big data; the lived experience of particular populations; evaluations of the contribution of specific solutions; critical analyses of social frameworks to better understand inequality problems.

Value of award (per year)

Home tuition fees at UKRI rate (£4,786 2024-25)

Annual stipend paid monthly at UKRI rates (£19,237 from 1 October 2024-25)

At what stage of my course application can I apply for this scholarship?

Please apply after you have submitted your application for an eligible course at the University of St Andrews. You do not need to wait until you have received an offer of a place before applying.

Application restrictions

Study level

Available to students studying at:

Postgraduate research

Domicile for fee status

Scotland home, Rest of UK, Overseas

Schools

Available to faculty members from:

Economics and Finance, Geography and Sustainable Development, History, International Relations, Management, Medicine, Psychology and Neuroscience, Social Anthropology, University of St Andrews Business School

Application assessment

Academic merit

Available to

Prospective students

Mode of study

Full time, Part time - daytime

Additional criteria

ESRC scholarships are awarded on the basis of academic excellence.

If you are applying for a 1+3 scholarship you must hold or be completing a UK undergraduate degree in a social science subject with first- or upper second-class honours (or an international qualification at an equivalent level).

If you are applying for a +3.5 scholarship you must, in addition to holding a UK undergraduate degree in a social science subject with first- or upper second-class honours (or an international qualification at an equivalent level), hold or be completing a Masters degree in a social science subject and satisfying the ESRC training requirements.

ESRC scholarships are open to UK applicants; a proportion of the awards available may also be offered to international applicants. Awards cover tuition fees for the award term and include a stipend at the regular Research Council rate. Please check the full UKRI eligibility criteria.

Full eligibility requirements can be found in the ESRC Postgraduate Funding Guide.

How to apply

Full details of the internal application process can be obtained from the postgraduate office in your prospective Academic School: https://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/about/schools/

Scholarships are awarded annually. The scholarship competition opens in autumn for degrees starting the following September.

Prospective students are strongly encouraged to apply as early as possible:

Please note, the applications deadline for the Open Competition Studentship funding beginning in 2025, ended on 21 November 2024.

  1. Identify and contact a potential supervisor - you must have the support of your preferred supervisor before making an application. If you are unable to identify a potential supervisor, contact the relevant pathway contact (details below).
  2. Apply for admission as a student to the University of St Andrews – see the advice on applying for admission
  3. Create an account on the SGSSS Apply– see the SGSSS application advice
  4. Add contact details for your referees to the SGSSS Apply. 
  5. Upload your application and supporting documents to the SGSSS Apply

Applications will be considered by the University in the first instance. Shortlisted applications will go forward to the next round of the competition.

Pathway Contacts

Accounting, Finance, Business, and Management

Economics

Geography and Sustainable Development

Politics and International Relations

Psychology

Social Anthropology

Dr Adam Reed, ader@st-andrews.ac.uk

Contact

ESRC website.