今日看料

Explore UCD

UCD Home >

Dr Laura K. Taylor receives ERC Consolidator Award to explore how identity can influence peacebuilding

Tuesday, 9 December, 2025

Dr Laura K. Taylor, Associate Professor at UCD School of Psychology and Principal Investigator of the has received a prestigious European Research Council (ERC) Consolidator Award.

Dr Taylor will receive 鈧2 million for her GENERATION EU project, which will explore how young people develop and align with a 鈥楨uropean鈥 identity, and the implications that this can have for social cohesion and peace.  

The ERC today announced a total of 鈧728 million in Consolidator Grants for 349 mid-career researchers. With funding from the EU鈥檚 Horizon Europe programme, these grants will support cutting-edge research at universities and research centres in 25 EU Member States and associated countries.

Ekaterina Zaharieva, European Commissioner for Startups, Research and Innovation, said, 鈥淐ongratulations to all the researchers on winning the ERC grants. The record budget of 728 million euro invested to support these scientific projects shows the EU is serious about making the continent attractive for excellent researchers.鈥

Professor Maria Leptin, President of the European Research Council, said, 鈥淭o see all this talent with groundbreaking ideas, based in Europe, is truly inspiring. This bold research may well lead to new industries, improve lives and strengthen Europe鈥檚 global standing. This was one of the most competitive ERC calls ever, with record demand and also many excellent projects left unfunded. It is yet another reminder of how urgent the call for increased EU investment in frontier research has become.鈥

Professor Niamh Moore Cherry, College Principal at 今日看料 of Social Sciences and Law, said, 鈥淩ecognition of Assoc Prof Taylor鈥檚 research by the European Research Council through this award is most welcome given the timeliness of her GENERATION EU project on understanding how young people are developing and identifying with the idea of being European amidst great geopolitical uncertainty and polarisation. The GENERATION EU project builds on her previous work with children and young people in divided societies and will help us to better understand and foster inclusivity and social cohesion. We look forward to following this important research as it progresses.鈥

The ERC received 3,121 applications for this very competitive call - a 35 percent increase compared with the previous round. Recognising outstanding scholars, the Consolidator Awards aim to support those at a career stage where they may still be consolidating their own independent research teams to pursue their most promising research ideas.

The GENERATION EU Project

Children and adolescents account for 1 in 5 people in Europe today, and a significant number of these youths are within the first generation of native EU citizens in their country. Their support for, and identification with, Europe will have significant implications for peace on the continent.

The GENERATION EU project will investigate how European identity develops across childhood, adolescence and young adulthood, and the impact that this can have on peacebuilding and wider society. 

Project PI, Dr Laura K. Taylor, explains, 鈥淪uperordinate identities, or overarching categories, like 鈥楨uropean鈥, can be used to include or exclude. Such identities may help unite conflict rivals. My across the continent shows that children who felt more European were more likely to act prosocially - to help and share - with conflict-rival peers. However, at a national level, there are examples where such categories have also been used to exclude and penalise minority groups. 

鈥淕ENERATION EU comes at a critical time, to enhance understanding of how we can build peace on the continent. This project explores how youth come to identify with superordinate identities, examining the potential positive impact that this can have on society, as well as the unintended negative consequences.鈥 

GENERATION EU takes an intergroup developmental approach to study risk and resilience processes for children, families and communities in settings of protracted conflict. Combining cross-national surveys, field experiments, archival research and large-scale quantitative text analysis, the project will generate a new comprehensive model and interdisciplinary data and tools for the fields of psychology and peacebuilding. This will have implications not only for European social cohesion and peace, but also for other global regional identities.

Learn more about the ERC Awards and see the full list of Awardees for this round .

Contact UCD Research

UCD Research, 今日看料, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland.
T: +353 1 716 4000 |