Co-producing Research

By Claire Levi & Kathryn Smith &
Co-producing Research by Claire Levi & Kathryn Smith &  digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

Offering a critical examination of the nature of co-produced research, this important new book draws on materials and case studies from the ESRC funded project ‘Imagine – connecting communities through research’. Outlining a community development approach to co-production, which privileges community agency, the editors link with wider debates about the role of universities within communities. With policy makers in mind, contributors discuss in clear and accessible language what co-production between community groups and academics can achieve. The book will be valuable for practitioners within community contexts, and researchers interested in working with communities, activists, and artists.

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About Claire Levi

Clare Levi works with older people at the Search project based in Benwell, Newcastle, UK. She coordinated the ‘Growing old in West Newcastle’ project for Imagine North East.

Benjamin Kyneswood

Ben Kyneswood is Lecturer in Sociology at Coventry University. His work involves using community photographic archives to challenge dominant narratives and established thinking. His company Photo Archive Miners recently published the photography book of Masterji and exhibits worldwide.

Natalie Walton

University of Huddersfield

Other books by Natalie Walton

Kim Streets

Beverly Wenger-Trayner

Beverly Wenger-Trayner is a learning consultant specializing in communities of practice and social learning systems. Her expertise encompasses both the design of learning architectures and the facilitation of processes, activities, and use of new technologies. She has also been the creative director of an Open Source platform for networked communities.

Suna Eryigit-Madzwamuse

Suna Eryigit-Madzwamuse is Senior Research Fellow and Deputy Director of the Centre of Resilience for Social Justice, University of Brighton. Her work focuses on promoting wellbeing and resilience of children, young people and their families, taking into account biological and contextual risk and protective factors from a developmental perspective. She also volunteers for the social enterprise, Boingboing.

Mandeep Samra

Mandeep Samra is an oral historian, artist and heritage activist, part of Let’s Go Yorkshire. She led Sound System Culture and Let’s Play Vinyl, both funded by Arts Council England. She is author of Sound System Culture: Celebrating Huddersfield’s Sound Systems (One Love, 2014).

Elizabeth Pente

Elizabeth Pente was awarded her PhD from the University of Huddersfield in 2018. Her research is concerned with public history and post-Second World War urban decline and regeneration. She is co-editor of Re-Imagining Contested Communities (Policy, 2017).

Natalie Pinnock-Hamilton

Natalie Pinnock-Hamilton MBE is a Huddersfield-based community activist, who has been involved in numerous community development projects. She is a leading force in Building African Caribbean Communities and Reach Performing Arts.

Onyeka Nubia

Onyeka Nubia an historian, writer and law lecturer who promotes the study of early modern histories to contextualise Black and World history. He has a PhD from the University of East Anglia and has published a number of books including Blackamoores: Africans in Tudor England, Their Presence, Status and Origins (Narrative Eye, 2013).

Milton Brown

Milton Brown is chief executive of Kirklees Local TV, which documents stories in Huddersfield and Dewsbury and surrounding areas. He is taking a PhD at the University of Huddersfield, on the experience of African-Caribbean people in navigating identity in post-war Britain.

Shabina Aslam

Shabina Aslam is a theatre maker and has been a creative producer and radio drama producer. She is undertaking a PhD at the University of Huddersfield on ‘bussing out’ – the 1960s and 1970s policy of the educational dispersal of black and Asian children.

Elizabeth Hoult

Elizabeth Chapman Hoult is a lecturer in the Department of Psychosocial Studies at Birkbeck, University of London, where she directs the MSc in Education, Power and Social Change. She uses literary theory and literary analysis to deepen understandings of individual and community resilience, hope and imagined futures.

Louise Ritchie

Louise Ritchie works at the Department for Lifelong learning at the University of Sheffield and has extensive experience as a researcher on community research projects.

Prue Chiles

Prue Chiles is a Professor of Architecture at the University of Newcastle.

Elias Kourkoutas

Elias Kourkoutas is Professor of Psychology and Special Education, University of Crete. His research explores ways to develop meaningful resilience-based inclusive practices that help teachers, parents, and students with special educational needs, social emotional and academic difficulties, and those at risk for school exclusion, overcome difficulties and be successfully included.

Anne Rathbone

Lisa Buttery

Lisa Buttery is an Artist in Residence and trainer with Boingboing where she designs illustrations and artwork, and co-produces books, films, exhibitions and conference presentations around visual arts, mental health and resilience. Her artwork is an important way of coping with mental health issues and raising awareness of mental health issues in young people.

Etienne Wenger-Trayner

Etienne Wenger-Trayner is a globally recognized thought leader in the field of social learning and communities of practice. He writes books and articles for practitioners in organisations who want to base their knowledge strategy on communities of practice. His work is influencing a growing number of organizations in the private and public sectors.

Josh Cameron

Josh Cameron is Principal Occupational Therapy Lecturer, University of Brighton. His interests include collaborative approaches to adult resilience, including the return-to-work experiences of workers with mental health problems, and combining the expertise and knowledge of people with lived experience, practitioners and academics for research and practice development. He also volunteers for the social enterprise Boingboing.

Andrew Church

Andrew Church is Professor of Human Geography and Associate Pro-Vice-Chancellor of Research and Enterprise, University of Brighton. His highly interdisciplinary and collaborative work focuses on human-nature relations and interactions to better understand how to manage change into the future.

Susanne Martikke

Susanne Martikke leads on research at Greater Manchester Centre for Voluntary Organisation (GMCVO), the voluntary sector support organisation for the city-region of Greater Manchester. She has more than twelve years’ experience of conducting research with and about the voluntary sector. Some of this research has been in partnership with academics at local and national universities. She is now working on a collaborative Studentship in Sociology at the University of Manchester.

Ruth Taylor

Ruth Taylor works for Pendower Good Neighbour Project, based in Benwell, Newcastle, UK. She coordinated the ‘Time traveller’ project with young people for Imagine North East.

Luke Johnston

Luke Johnston is a detached youth worker with Phoenix Detached Youth Project in North Shields, UK. His main areas of work are detached work, developing street spaces, working with young men’s issues and education around social media safety. He coordinated an intergenerational graffiti art project for Imagine North East.

Patrick Harman

Patrick Harman is Executive Director of the Hayden-Harman Foundation, which focuses on community development efforts in High Point, North Carolina, US. He also teaches courses on the non-profit sector at Elon University, US. He provided assistance to Imagine North East during his Fulbright fellowship.

Yvonne Hall

Yvonne Hall was formerly a community researcher at the Cedarwood Trust, Meadow Well Estate, North Shields, where she coordinated the ‘Imagining Community at Cedarwood’ project for Imagine North East. She is now studying for a degree in Psychology with History.

Anne Bonner

Anne Bonner is the Chief Executive of Riverside Community Health Project in Benwell, Newcastle. She works alongside a committed team addressing the effects of inequalities on the lives of people who live in the west end of Newcastle. Riverside undertook a project on ‘playing with change and ideas’ for Imagine North East.

Andrea Armstrong

Andrea Armstrong is a researcher at Durham University, UK, currently working on the dynamics of trust in physical places/digital spaces. She was Research Associate for Imagine North East.

Sarah Banks

Sarah Banks is Professor in the School of Applied Social Sciences and Co-director, Centre for Social Justice and Community Action, Durham University, UK. She teaches and researches in the fields of community development, professional ethics and participatory action research. She was Coordinator of Imagine North East.

Angie Hart

Angie Hart is Professor of Child, Family and Community Health and Director of the Centre of Resilience for Social Justice, University of Brighton. She teaches professional health and social care courses and undertakes participatory research into resilience and inequalities. Angie directs a community interest company, Boingboing, supporting children, families and practitioners (www.boingboing.org.uk).

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