University of Sheffield academics given highest honour by British Academy

Three academics from the University of Sheffield have been elected Fellows of the British Academy - the highest honour bestowed by the UK’s national academy for the humanities and social sciences.

Students stood outside Firth Court
  • Three academics from the University of Sheffield have been elected Fellows of the British Academy
  • The Academy is the UK’s national academy for the humanities and social sciences and its Fellowship is its highest honour
  • Sheffield academics have been elected in recognition of their outstanding research that represents the very best of humanities and social sciences research in the UK

Three academics from the University of Sheffield have been elected Fellows of the British Academy - the highest honour bestowed by the UK’s national academy for the humanities and social sciences.

Professor Daniel Goodley, Professor Helen Kennedy and Dr David McCallam have been elected in recognition of their work that represents the very best of the UK’s humanities and social sciences research.

Professor Daniel Goodley is a Professor of Disability Studies and Education. His research has made an outstanding contribution to understanding and contesting ableism and disablism - what society views as being a productive citizen and the exclusion of people with  physical, sensory and/or cognitive impairments. Professor Goodley is also co-director of iHuman; an interdisciplinary institute for the study of what it means to be human.

Dan in a hat smiling

Professor Helen Kennedy is a Professor of Digital Society. For over 20 years, she has researched how developments in digital technology are experienced in everyday life. Much of her research has been informed by forms of digital inequity and mechanisms for change and resistance, for example, class, gender, race, disability, digital labour, digital identity and digital representation. 

Professor Helen Kennedy, Department of Sociological Studies

Dr David McCallam is a Reader in French Eighteenth-Century Studies. He is a specialist in eighteenth-century French literature, the French Enlightenment and the French Revolution. His research has also focused on the environment in eighteenth-century France and Europe, specifically on dynamic geological and meteorological phenomena, such as volcanoes, avalanches and clouds. In 2019, Dr McCallam published a wide-ranging study on the cultural significance of volcanoes in eighteenth-century Europe.

Dr David McCallam

Professor Sue Hartley, Vice-President for Research at the University of Sheffield, said: “It is fantastic to see three academics from Sheffield being elected Fellows of the British Academy. Each one of them has made exceptional contributions to their field of research and their work clearly demonstrates the importance and impact of research from the humanities and social sciences. I am looking forward to seeing them work with the Academy over the coming years and I am excited to see them representing Sheffield in the Academy’s community of distinguished academics.” 

Welcoming the new Fellows for 2024, President of the British Academy Professor Julia Black, said: “We are delighted to welcome this year’s cohort of Fellows, and I offer my warmest congratulations to each and every one. Since the Academy was created in 1902, our Fellows have been the lifeblood of the organisation, representing the very best of our disciplines – and we would not have the impact we have without their expertise, time and energy. I very much look forward to working closely with our new Fellows; the breadth and depth of their expertise adds so much to the Academy.”


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