CNHH member Dominique Marshall is part of the team of the new and urgent Humanitarian Archive Emergency (HAE) project, based at Manchester University, and funded by the Leverhulme and the Wellcome Trusts.

Leverhulme Trust and Wellcome Trust combine support for the Humanitarian Archive Emergency project based at the Humanitarian and Conflict Response Institute at The University of Manchester in partnership with The University of Manchester Library.

This co-funded initiative responds to a critical shortfall in the digital infrastructure underpinning humanitarian and global health research. With a combined investment of £608k, this 12-month scoping and research programme will mobilise international partnerships, develop rescue mechanisms for endangered datasets, and conduct vital inquiry to establish ethical triage frameworks to safeguard records.

More information regarding the project, its mission, and the ever-increasing need for collaborations like this can be found at the HAE website: https://www.manchester.ac.uk/about/news/leverhulme-trust-and-wellcome-trust-combine-support/