Advertising Feature By Gunjan SinhaJul. 15, 2016 , 9:00 AM This Advertising Feature has been commissioned, edited, and produced by the Science/AAAS Custom Publishing Office At the 2016 EuroScience Open Forum (ESOF), Manchester will flaunt its stuff. With over £500 million (US$720 million) flowing in from both public and private sources to support new science facilities and research, the city has lots to show off. For job seekers, Manchester offers an atmosphere where industry works seamlessly with academia, making it possible to have a foot in both worlds. Melissa Denecke was anxious. She had spent the past 30-plus years in Germany—her entire postgraduate and academic career—successfully conducting nuclear-related research. Then in 2011, the Fukushima catastrophe happened. The 15-meter tsunami that hit Japan damaged several nuclear power plants, which then leaked radioactive contamination into the environment. Shortly afterwards, the future of nuclear research in Germany turned grim. The government announced a phase-out of all nuclear power by 2022. “There was a department meeting where I felt very apprehensive about future funding prospects,” she recalls. At the time, Denecke was at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology in Germany, where she was quite content as a department head. But the political fallout from Fukushima…