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Royal award recognises research unit combating violence against women
Summary
London Metropolitan University's Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit received a Queen Elizabeth prize after 40 years of research and work to end violence against women and girls, presented at a ceremony at St James's Palace attended by the King and Queen.
Content
London Metropolitan University's Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit has been awarded a Queen Elizabeth prize in recognition of four decades of work to end violence against women and girls. The prize was presented at a ceremony at St James's Palace hosted by the King and Queen, with the Princess Royal and the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester attending. The unit's work includes interdisciplinary research, police intervention initiatives, criminal justice reform and improved support for survivors. Queen Camilla met the unit's Professor Fiona Vera-Gray and senior research fellow Jo Lovett at the event.
Notable details:
- The unit has carried out 40 years of work aimed at ending violence against women and girls.
- The King and Queen hosted the ceremony at St James's Palace, with other senior royals present.
- Queen Camilla has campaigned on domestic violence and sexual abuse and met the unit's representatives; she has previously supported Rape Crisis.
- The Queen Elizabeth prizes for higher and further education are awarded every two years for work judged to show excellence, innovation, impact and benefit.
- Other winners named included the London Institute of Cancer Research, the University of Edinburgh, and the University of Oxford for its OpenSAFELY platform.
Summary:
The award recognises the unit's long-term research, policy engagement and survivor support work. Undetermined at this time.
