The Centre for Anthropology and Mental Health Research in Action (CAMHRA) is holding the second and final year of its current Doctoral Scholarship Programme. CAMHRA invites applications from those seeking to advance research that brings anthropological insight to bear on the field of mental health.
Recently established within the SOAS Department of Anthropology and Sociology, CAMHRA is a globally oriented and locally connected hub for cutting-edge anthropological research, education, and public engagement on mental health. Working with partners across academia, statutory healthcare, and policy, and alongside service users, CAMHRA contributes distinctly anthropological perspectives to a growing global understanding of how societies can understand and respond to mental distress and build effective systems of care.
This prestigious scholarship offers the opportunity for successful applicants to pursue a fully-funded 3-year PhD under the mentorship of leading experts in the fields of anthropology and mental health. The scholarship will cover student fees (Home/Overseas) and include a living stipend of £22,780 per year (in line with UKRI stipends, inclusive of London weighting).
Five doctoral scholarships are available, allowing successful applicants to dedicate their time to producing transformative research that addresses some of the most pressing mental health challenges faced by communities in London and around the world.
Scholarship holders automatically become Research Student Affiliates with CAMHRA and receive speciality training through the PhD Programme’s Medical Anthropology/Mental Health cluster and CAMHRA’s specialist researcher workshops on methods, fieldwork skills, and self-care for clinical ethnography and other forms of deeply embedded research practice. This bespoke training draws on the expertise of CAMHRA’s affiliated academics and on input from CAMHRA’s partnership with the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust.
We are excited to invite proposals from PhD applicants whose academic trajectory and anticipated project lie at the intersection of anthropology and mental health. Applicants must have a prior degree in anthropology. We strongly welcome applications from persons with lived experience of mental health service use, and from members of underrepresented groups. We welcome applicants from the UK and internationally.
Project details
We particularly welcome applicants whose proposed project aligns with the Centre’s areas of interest, outlined below. We also welcome applicants who are excited about generating a new thematic area that strengthens, activates, and grows CAMHRA’s network and partners.
Current areas of research focus within CAMHRA:
- relational approaches to healing and cultivating wellbeing
- environmental and ecological distress
- care work and carers
- lived experience research practices
- race and inequality
- social isolation, loneliness and intentional community
- religion and spirituality
- institutions, organisational culture and mental healthcare
- models and metrics of distress and healing
Applicants are welcome to reach out to prospective PhD supervisors to enquire about a possible fit, but are not required to do so prior to application. Please note that due to the high volume of enquiries received, it is possible that applicants may not hear back from a prospective supervisor. This will not affect their consideration for the PhD programme.
Candidate criteria
Scholarship applicants must have a proposed project that deploys anthropological approaches and ethnographic methods to the study of mental health, broadly conceived.
Applicants can be home or international students.
Applicants must have a bachelors and/or masters degree in anthropology, with a merit or equivalent in the masters degree and a masters dissertation grade of 65% (UK) or higher. In exceptional cases, we may accept applicants who do not meet these criteria if they show evidence of a strong masters degree and/or appropriate level of relevant work experience.
International applicants should also see Doctoral School English language requirements.
Deadline
You must submit an application to the PhD programme in Anthropology and Sociology at SOAS by 12:00 pm UK local time on 5 January 2026. Applicants will be notified by mid-February if they have been accepted to the PhD programme.
Please be sure to mention in your personal statement that you would like to be considered for the CAMHRA Scholarship.
For further information, support and to see how to apply, please click here: https://www.soas.ac.uk/study/student-life/finance/scholarships/camhra-doctoral-scholarships