From 2006 onwards, Lora-Wainwright began to focus more on pollution in the countryside of China, due to her interest in the connections between the environment, peoples' activities and their health. She has organised a number of workshops on these issues, involving staff from several academic disciplines. She started working at the
School of Geography and the Environment at the
University of Oxford in 2009; prior to this, she worked at the
University of Manchester. In April 2018, she was awarded the British Sociological Association/BBC
Thinking Allowed Ethnography Prize for her book
Resigned Activism: Living with Pollution in Rural China. However, in 2019, a panel found that Lora-Wainwright committed misconduct by not adequately acknowledging the work of Chinese colleagues in the book; she was told to change the book's content to make sure their work was cited. In 2018, she became Professor of the Human Geography of China at the University of Oxford. == References ==