Networked Communities as Dynamic Co-Created Learning Environments

Lead Research Organisation: University of Brighton
Department Name: Sch of Environment and Technology

Abstract

This project seeks to challenge the ways in which dominant constructions of community have been tied to dominant modes of research, by co-designing a programme of arts and humanities research that will open up the workings of communities, examining communities from the standpoint of those who have everyday experience of, and strong connections to and within, these communities. At the core of the proposed project is a desire - by community partners and academics - to create accounts of communities that do justice to their collective wisdom, dynamism and connectivity, as well as their transience, their needs to transform, and their responses to change, in ways that reflect the lives of those involved rather than the needs of externally imposed disciplinary regimes. This research recognises that there can no longer be clearly demarcated boundaries between 'academics' and 'community partners' in a genuinely co-designed research project. Rather, there are groups of people (research partners) who share a mutual recognition of skills and experiences that allow them to commit to a 'new scholarship' that reflects their collective identities as members of communities who seek new understandings about how their communities function and interact with other such communities.

Planned Impact

This proposal has been prepared in co-operation with the intended beneficiaries of the work, to ensure that all the investigators are fully engaged from the outset. Without the beneficiaries, there is no project. This means that the project itself provides the critical pathway towards societal impact. All the investigators (academic and community) are committed to working co-operatively and to ensuring that their work is transparent and transferable to others. The project builds on an established academic/community relationship that has experience in delivering social impact.
 
Description Through a series of co-created and facilitated workshops and training programmes, this project has brought facilitation practice into conversation with academic research methods to create a co-designed multi-method model for organising the generation of data about personal and community histories and associations. This model, termed the Community Stories Spiral (CSS), represents a 'shared space' that has been developed through a collaborative effort involving sharing and transfer of knowledge and skills. The CSS has since been used to examine a range of community-based issues, in the process challenging conventional academic constructions of community as largely isolated and static.
Exploitation Route The findings have been used by European researchers looking at the ways in which people living near small waterways make a sense of place out of those waterways. The findings have also been used to help understand the oral histories of displaced people newly arrived in the UK. In both cases it was important that the research method did not pre-judge or pre-figure what or who was important in terms of the stories that were told.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Education,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections

 
Description The findings have been used as part of a pilot approach to gathering and interpreting the oral histories of displaced people newly arrived in the UK. Out approach was used because it was important to provide a space in which peopel could tell, retell and relive their stories in ways that are not offered by more conventional approaches to oral history research
First Year Of Impact 2013
Sector Communities and Social Services/Policy,Education,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections
Impact Types Cultural,Societal

 
Title Collaborative Stories Spiral 
Description This is a new conceptual frame within which to conduct oral and community histories research 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2015 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact None yet 
 
Description Circular storytelling: reimagining stories as a means of doing community histories. 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The 2-hour workshop, which took place in Amsterdam, on a new conceptual approach to oral history research has led to several requests to use the approach and for more guidance about how it might help curators and other archivists and museum professionals

After this workshop we were invited to join a research group that was bidding for new research on the cultural heritage of Europe's minor waterways. This was successful (AHRC EUWATHER)
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description Introducing the 'Collaborative Stories Spiral': a participatory methodology for creating transformational community history projects. 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? Yes
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact The talk sparked requests for more information and invitations to present the work at other events

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Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2015
 
Description Using collaborative story telling to generate hidden histories 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact The purpose of this workshop was to introduce the Collaborative Stories Spiral to a group of practitioners seeking to explore untold and hidden histories
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016