Research Culture Uncovered Podcast Por Research Culturosity University of Leeds arte de portada

Research Culture Uncovered

Research Culture Uncovered

De: Research Culturosity University of Leeds
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At the University of Leeds, we believe that all members of our research community play a crucial role in developing and promoting a positive and inclusive research culture. Across the globe, the urgent need for a better Research Culture in Higher Education is widely accepted – but how do you make it happen? This weekly podcast focuses on our ideas, approaches and learning as we contribute to the University's attempt to create a Research Culture in which everyone can thrive. Whether you undertake, lead, fund or benefit from research - these are the conversations to listen to if you want to explore what a positive Research Culture is and why it matters. Unless specified in the episode shownotes, Research Culture Uncovered © 2023 by Research Culturosity, University of Leeds is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. This license requires that reusers give credit to the creator. If you remix, adapt, or build upon the material, you must license the modified material under identical terms. Some episodes may be licensed under CC BY-ND 4.0, please check before use.Unless specified in shownotes, Research Culture Uncovered © 2023 by Research Culturosity, is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. Reusers must give credit to the creator. If you remix, adapt, or build upon the material, you must license under identical terms. Ciencias Sociales
Episodios
  • (Episode 155) What Shapes a Researcher? Reflections from a Worldwide Universities Network Series
    Apr 15 2026
    🎙️ In our latest episode of Research Culture Uncovered, host Heledd Jarosz-Griffiths explores a deceptively simple question: what actually shapes a researcher?Drawing on reflections from a Worldwide Universities Network (WUN) series, this episode brings together voices from across global research development sessions — exploring research vision, impact, careers, culture, and identity.🔹 Why research vision matters — and why it’s so hard to articulateHear insights from Dr Jim Baxter on developing long-term direction, and why the pressures of funding, publishing, and short-term goals can pull researchers away from the bigger picture.🔹 What counts as “impact” — and who decidesExplore reflections from Ged Hall on how impact is shaped by discipline, national context, and institutional priorities — and whether researchers follow or challenge those systems.🔹 Research culture beyond the buzzwordsDr Marjorie Boissinot unpacks the complexity of research culture across global contexts, and why much of what shapes culture isn’t always labelled as such.🔹 Creating space to think — even in busy, online environmentsFrom Taryn Bell’s session, discover how meaningful reflection can happen even in large-scale virtual settings — and why researchers are more ready for these conversations than we might assume.🔹 Visibility, identity, and showing up as a researcherThrough Ruth Winden’s work, explore how researchers navigate professional identity — balancing authenticity, visibility, and the expectations of academic and non-academic audiences.🔹 The emotional side of research we don’t always talk aboutFrom Heledd’s own session on rejection, this episode reflects on the shared emotional realities of research — and how creating space to acknowledge them can shift how we move forward.💡 If you’re thinking about your own direction, identity, or place within research — this episode offers space to pause, reflect, and reconnect with what matters.Links and resources🔗 Worldwide Universities Network (WUN)https://www.wun.ac.uk/🔗 LinkedIn (contributors)Jim Baxter – (follow Jim on LinkedIn)Ged Hall – (follow Ged on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Marjorie Boissinot – (follow Marjorie on LinkedIn)Taryn Bell – (follow Taryn on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Ruth Winden – (follow Ruth on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Follow us on Bluesky:@researcherdevleeds.bsky.social (new episodes are announced here)@openresleeds.bsky.social@researchcultureuol.bsky.socialConnect on LinkedIn:@ResearchUncoveredPodcast (new episodes are announced here)📩 If you would like to contribute to a podcast episode:researcherdevelopment@leeds.ac.uk
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    21 m
  • (Episode 154) Cripping research culture: podcasting, disability justice, and counter archives (with Dr Élaina Gauthier Mamaril)
    Apr 8 2026
    “What if all we have is the now? […] the now is generative and worthwhile.” — Dr Élaina Gauthier‑MamarilHost Dr Emily Ennis sits down with Dr Élaina Gauthier‑Mamaril – a disabled philosopher of disability and Research Associate on the Wellcome‑funded Anti‑Ableist Research Culture project at the University of Sheffield – to explore podcasting as method, community, and counter‑archive.In this conversation:Podcasting as a research method. From Massively Disabled to Cripping Research Culture, Élaina experiments with sound, affect, and “epistemic brokering” to amplify disabled knowledges and blur the subject/object divide, especially around COVID and long COVID.Rigour with care. Podcasting isn’t “less scholarly”, it’s differently-rigorous. Élaina talks positionality, disclosure, and even choosing to leave audible pain in‑track to honour labour and embodiment, while pushing for broader vocal inclusion (accents, speech impairments) in HE audio.Access by design. Why transcripts are non‑negotiable, when BSL interpreting is added, and how audio meets listeners in bed, on tough clinic days, or when isolation bites, turning parasocial connection into real community.Beyond “academics only”. Inside the Sheffield project’s “third spaces,” including a sector survey with NADSN and webinars (curated with Quiplash CIC) for disabled professional services staff, because research culture is everybody’s work.Recognition matters. Podcasting is work, not a weekend hobby: it deserves to be planned, supported, and credited like any other research/engagement output.What’s next. A protocol for collaborative podcasting (data, consent, copyright, co‑editing), research on disability doulas and long COVID, and a creative project with Khairani Barokka adapting Annah, Infinite with Indonesian/Javanese voices and community co‑creation.🎙️ Referenced PodcastsCripping Research Culture podcastMassively Disabled podcastAccentricity podcast (run by Sadie Ryan)📚 Books & PublicationsSo You Want to Start a Podcast – by Kristen MeinzerBlack Disability Politics – by Sami SchalkGauthier-Mamaril É. Podcasting as a Recreational Scholarship Praxis. Hypatia. Published online 2026:1-20. doi:10.1017/hyp.2025.10055Annah, Infinite – by Khairani Barokka (for the creative project)🏛️ Projects, Grants, Networks & OrganisationsWellcome-funded Anti-Ableist Research Culture Project (University of Sheffield)National Association for Disabled Staff Networks (NADSN)Quiplash (community interest company supporting disability-led events/webinars)
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    41 m
  • (Episode 153) How we solved research culture (you're welcome)
    Apr 1 2026
    In today's final episode of Research Culture Uncovered, hosts Taryn Bell and Emily Ennis discuss how they solved research culture. With no more issues left to fix, and everything running smoothly, they take one last opportunity to sit back, rest, and reflect on how everything went so right...Just kidding. Happy April Fools!In this episode, Taryn and Emily look back at what’s been achieved over the last 12 months, discuss some of the ‘classic’ research culture challenges facing higher education, and confront the notion that research culture is a problem that can be solved for good.Key takeaways:Research culture isn't something that can ever be solved - it's an ongoing, evolving processReal, genuine change can't come from research culture teams alone - meaningful change requires widespread involvement and collective responsibilityMore than ever, research culture needs to become a matter of 'business as usual', rather than an added extraIn case you'd like to know more...Learn more about Research Culture at LeedsNever heard of the REF? Read more about the Research Excellence FrameworkAll of our episodes can be accessed via the following playlists:Research Impact with Ged Hall (follow Ged on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Research Impact Heroes with Ged HallOpen Research with Nick Sheppard (follow Nick on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Research Careers with Ruth Winden (follow Ruth on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Research talent managementMeet the Research Culturositists with Emma Spary (follow Emma on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Research co-productionResearch evaluationResearch leadershipResearch professionalsAcademic failure with Taryn Bell (follow Taryn on Bluesky and LinkedIn)Follow us on Bluesky: @researcherdevleeds.bsky.social (new episodes are announced here), @openresleeds.bsky.social, @researchcultureuol.bsky.socialConnect to us on LinkedIn: @ResearchUncoveredPodcast (new episodes are announced here)If you would like to contribute to a podcast episode get in touch: researcherdevelopment@leeds.ac.uk
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    35 m
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