Research Community

These pages provide a 'who's who' of UK research centres and researchers conducting research with Serving and ex-Service personnel and their families, including detail of their specific areas of focus and expertise. The purpose of these pages is to connect researchers with shared interests and orientate service providers and policy makers to who is doing research in key areas of interest. If you would like your information added to this page please email [email protected].

Research Home
  • Rebecca Steel

    Preston, United Kingdom

    Rebecca Steel is the Director of the College for Military Veterans and Emergency Services based at the University of Central Lancashire, she has led the programme of transition and engagement for the armed forces community for the past three years. Rebecca is a strong advocate for education as a pathway to transition.

    In addition, Rebecca is from a military family with three service children of her own. Rebecca’s research portfolio involves a number of studies and focusses on the impact of military mobility/transition on education and the future trajectories of families engaged with military service. Rebecca’s research employs participatory and mixed methodologies to explore themes around education, learning, and employment to ensure a level playing field and sense of agency for those hidden voices of the military community who are seldom heard.

    Rebecca is currently leading research on identifying the needs of service young people, veterans, and spouses in Further and Higher Education.

    Rebecca is a member of the Service Children’s Progression (SCiP) Alliance Management Group, chairs the North West’s SCiP Hub, a founder member of Lancashire Armed Forces Covenant Hub and is involved in several active research programmes locally, nationally and internationally

    Affiliation

    • The University of Central Lancashire

    Contact

  • PhD Student Sarah Rabin

    London, United Kingdom

    Sarah Rabin is a PhD student within King's Centre for Military Health Research (KCMHR) looking at the health and well-being of UK LGBT+ Serving and ex-Serving military personnel. Before she started her PhD, she was a Research Assistant within KCMHR and held a dual role working with the NHS Check project and the Academic Department of Military Mental Health. Sarah received her Master's from King's College London in War and Psychiatry, where her dissertation focused on the final withdrawal of troops from Afghanistan and its impact on UK Serving and ex-Serving military personnel. She also holds experience researching suicide prevention within US Veteran communities.

    Affiliation

    • King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London
  • Service Children's (SCiP) Progression alliance Impact Centre,

    Winchester, United Kingdom

    The Impact Centre is a collaboration between the SCiP Alliance and the King's Centre for Military Health Research. The Impact Centre's role is to enhance the evidencing and evaluation practices of those working to support Service children. This involves providing evaluation training, consultancy, and evidence-into-practice briefings to better equip the Service children supporting sector. The Impact Centre collaborates with practitioners (education, third sector, social workers, etc), researchers, policy makers and funders to best understand what works for supporting Service children. 

    Affiliation

    • SCiP Alliance, KCHMR
  • PhD Student Siobhan Cambridge

    Chelmsford, UK

    Siobhan is a fully funded PhD student at The Veterans and Families Institute for Military Social Research, at Anglia Ruskin University. Her research aims to understand the experiences of Military mobility for young people from British Army families; by collecting primary data that speaks directly to young people. Siobhan also works for SSAFA Community Health, alongside British Armed Forces Overseas, as a (visiting) Child and Adolescent Mental Health Community Nursing Practitioner and a newly accredited ADOS-2 Assessor. She has volunteered in different activities to support the Armed Forces community. She has an undergraduate degree in Applied Social Science and Social Policy, a master’s degree in Psychology, and a master’s degree in Mental Health Nursing. Her research has always been focused on the Armed Forces community, with the aim to promote awareness of experiences, challenges and to recommend support.

    Affiliation

    • The Veterans and Families Institute for Military Social Research, at Anglia Ruskin University and SSAFA, the Armed Forces Charity
  • Stress, Trauma, and Related Conditions (STARC) Research Centre

    Belfast, United Kingdom

    The work of the Stress, Trauma, and Related Conditions (STARC) Research Centre focuses on the psychological well-being and mental health of those who have experienced stress, adversity, and trauma. The team focus on exploring and understanding predictors, correlates, and impacts of a range of psychological disorders including, but not limited to, PTSD, Depression, Anxiety, and Dissociation and work with a range of different populations (healthcare workers, emergency services, Armed Forces, children and adolescents, as well as the general adult population). Additionally, recent efforts have focused on exploring the concept of post adversity psychological resilience.

    Affiliation

    • Queen's University Belfast
  • PhD Student Tamara Obradovic

    London, United Kingdom

    Tamara Obradovic is a PhD student at the King’s Centre for Military Health Research (KCMHR), King’s College London. Tamara's PhD is a mixed methods study exploring the prevalence and impacts of Military Sexual Trauma in ex-Serving females in the UK, with a particular focus on the implications for mental health and help-seeking. Before joining the King’s Centre for Military Health Research, Tamara completed a masters in psychology at the University of Bristol. Her research interests include women's mental health, the mental health impacts of trauma, and occupational mental health.

    Affiliation

    • King's Centre for Military Health Research, King's College London

    Contact