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GISRUK Prizes for 果冻影院 Geography Early Career Researchers

24 May 2022

Congratulations to 果冻影院 Geography PhD candidates Abigail Hill and Shunya Kimura for winning prizes at the GISRUK Conference last month.

果冻影院 Geography Early Career Researchers at GISRUK 2022, L to R: Jakub Wyszomierski, Louise Sieg, Shunya Kimura (CASA Prize winner), James Todd (Associate Lecturer, 果冻影院 Geography), Abigail Hill (ECR Prize winner), Jason Tang.

Abigail, a research student with the聽聽and 果冻影院 Geography, won the Best Early-Career Presentation Award, sponsored by Google, for her presentation on 鈥溾. Her research creates a typology of resilience across Britain's high streets using hierarchical clustering with spatial constraints. The analysis incorporates a measure of the proportion of stores deemed as 鈥榚ssential鈥 by the British government during the numerous lockdown periods. Her work found that the聽COVID-19聽lockdown restrictions made pre-existing vacancy trends worse, especially for those high streets struggling before the pandemic.

Abigail said: 鈥淚 am so grateful to everyone who voted for me to win the award. I hope everyone enjoyed my presentation and could see the policy benefits of my research鈥.

Shunya, a PhD student also with CDRC and 果冻影院 Geography, won the CASA Prize for Best Spatial Analysis Paper, for his presentation on 鈥溾. The prize, sponsored by CASA in memory of聽Sinesio Alves Junior, was awarded for Shunya's research exploring gambling risk and vulnerability. Gambling harm disrupts the health and wellbeing of individuals, as well as families, communities and societies around them. Despite the growing recognition that gambling harms are socially and geographically uneven in their impacts and how they occur, there is limited empirical knowledge about the factors underlying the disparities. Shunya's work quantitatively profiled a nationwide gambling survey using a series of small area geodemographic data. The results were synthesized to devise a composite indicator of gambling risk and vulnerability that can be mapped to provide new insights into public health strategies for tackling gambling harms more effectively.

Shunya said: "I was shocked when they called my name as the prize winner but am very much honoured and proud to have our work recognised. I am grateful to the CDRC team for all their continuous support. Winning the prize has definitely given me a motivational boost in developing my research further."