The year-long programme offers interactive skills training and career development sessions, tailored mentoring and the opportunity to network with research leaders. It is designed so that participants are part of a unique cohort to share learnings and includes:
- Interactive career development workshops
The workshops will be tailored to support attendees through the challenges of combining research, teaching, clinical practice and caring and other responsibilities where relevant. Previous sessions have included topics on:
- Time management
• Negotiation
• Setting up a research team for success
• Developing your leadership style
The cohort is small by design and are matched in co-coaching trios to enable ongoing peer support and safe discussion of issues/challenges. Small group work at each workshop helps to embed and put into practice key learning points.
Participants will be by default paired with an Academy Fellow. However, if a participant prefers not to be paired with an Academy Fellow, they will have the option of being paired with a SUSTAIN alum only. We are also trialling a new process where all participants will have the option to have an additional mentor, a SUSTAIN alum, should they wish to take advantage of this opportunity. Bespoke training and ongoing support will be provided to both mentees and mentors over the course of the programme.
SUSTAIN supports 24 women for a period of one year. Only award holders from the following partner organisations are eligible.
Royal Society
- Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowship
- Sir Henry Dale Fellowship
- University Research Fellowship
- Career Development Fellowship
Academy of Medical Sciences
- Springboard Award
- Starter Grant Award for Clinical Lecturers
Royal Academy of Engineering
- Research Fellow
- Engineering for Development Research Fellows
In February 2022, we published the findings of an independent evaluation of the SUSTAIN programme, which looked at the lasting impact the programme has had since it first started in 2015. SUSTAIN was found to be strikingly successful, with over 90% of evaluation participants saying the programme was helping them thrive as independent researchers. You can find visual highlights of this report here:

We also work to support individuals and organisations who are developing their own programmes similar to SUSTAIN. If you are looking to develop your own programme, you can explore our new toolkit here.
Read case studies of SUSTAIN participants here.
“SUSTAIN is the first programme that is tailored specifically towards women at the beginning stages of their independent careers. By integrating a range of approaches, SUSTAIN enables new PIs to develop their own, personal leadership styles needed for their successful progression as scientists.”
Professor Eva Hoffman, SUSTAIN reference group
“Trying to build a career, deliver high quality science and raise a family can seem daunting. But you are not alone and many of the challenges faced by women in research are shared. SUSTAIN offers a structured programme of training and mentorship coupled with the opportunity to learn from and share with people who have walked (or are walking) in your shoes.”
Professor Elizabeth Sapey, SUSTAIN reference group
A number of reports over the past decade have highlighted the relative paucity of women researchers in science securing senior leadership posts in the UK due to barriers and hidden biases[1][2][3]. Although the number is slowly rising, the Academy believes that a more concerted effort is needed to ensure women are appropriately supported along their career trajectory to enable them to secure those senior positions.
[2] UKRC, 2009. Female Attrition, Retention and Barriers to Careers in SET Academic Research. Royal Society of Edinburgh, 2012. Tapping all our talents. NAS, 2010. Gender Differences at Critical Transitions in the Careers of Science, Engineering, and Mathematics Faculty.
Reference group members
- Professor Christine Harrison FMedSci, Professor of Childhood Cancer Cytogenetics, Newcastle University (chair)
- Professor Jim Smith FRS FMedSci, Director of Science, Wellcome and Visiting Group Leader, Francis Crick Institute
- Professor Elizabeth Sapey, Director of the Institute of Inflammation and Ageing, University of Birmingham and FLIER round two participant
- Dr Zania Stamataki, Senior Lecturer in Liver Immunology, University of Birmingham and SUSTAIN round one participant
SUSTAIN round 11 participants:
Dr Angeliki Zarkali, University College London
Dr Ana Tiganescu, University of Leeds
Dr Karen Suetterlin, Newcastle University
Dr Pei San (Sharel) E, University of Edinburgh
Professor Maria Bruna, University of Oxford
Dr Ines Cebola, Imperial College London
Dr Chiara Maniaci, University of Dundee
Dr Maria Marti Solano, University of Cambridge
Dr Nur Unal, University of Birmingham
Dr Margarita Khokhlova, King's College London
Dr Maria Duque-Correa, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine
Dr Carmen Sanchez-Canizares, University of Oxford
Dr Abigail Ackerman, Imperial College London
Dr Elizabeth Polgreen, University of Edinburgh
Dr Mina Kim, University College London
Dr Ritika Kapoor, King's College London
Dr Jo Morrison, Somerset NHS Foundation Trust
Dr Paloma Ordóñez, University of Nottingham
Dr Panayiota Michalopoulou, King's College London
Dr Eleanor Sanderson, University of Bristol
Dr Eleanor Leigh, University of Oxford
Dr Kate Birnie, University of Bristol
Dr Laura Jardine, Newcastle University