Researchers in Conversation: Re-Imagining Cross-sector Collaborations

Date 13 March 2024
Time 5:30 - 7pm
Location 309 Regent Street
Cost Free

You are warmly invited to join a roundtable discussion to explore how researchers across museums and universities can work together to meet the challenges of a rapidly changing research landscape.
 

Museum visitors watching screen

About the event 

The idea of what comprises ‘research’, who and what this involves, and its impact and responsibilities have undergone a significant change in the twenty-first century. Researchers are encouraged to be more outward facing, collaborative and enterprising. This has changed the kinds of research we do, as well as the places it is performed. Academic research has always been central to university life, but increasingly it has been recognised as an integral function of the museum: underpinning the care, display and understanding of collections; the content of exhibitions and programming; and the museum’s relationship with its audiences.

With interventions from funding bodies, museum research has become more formalised, more academic, and the boundaries between the university and museum worlds have become permeable. Alongside this shift, the role of museums in society has been increasingly questioned, with calls to decolonise, diversify, and democratise museum practice, offering challenges and opportunities for new museum-based researchers. In higher education institutions the research landscape is also changing, where the Research Excellence Framework (REF) exercise, with its emphasis on impact and knowledge exchange, is shaping the research agenda. 

Despite these different institutional pulls, researchers in museums and universities have more in common than ever, sharing a commitment to learning from the past to engage critically with the present and imagine a different future. Working in complex, bureaucratic institutions also shapes how responsive researchers can be to the challenging cultural and social issues they can encounter. As such, this evolving research environment has the potential to generate new opportunities to rethink traditional boundaries between scholarship and practice-based research, and to imagine new synergies for cross-sector collaborations that will benefit both fields and, crucially, the communities we all serve. 

Before opening the floor for discussion, the panel will respond to the following points:

  • The similarities and differences in the research agenda of cultural institutions and universities, and on how we can better understand and support each other;
  • Strategies for a sustainable and ethical approach to working with local and global communities;
  • The future of cross-sector collaborations;
  • The skills, experience and expertise the next generation of researchers will need to navigate this increasingly complex research landscape.

More information

This event will begin at 17.30 and will be followed by a drinks reception from 19.00. 

 

To book your free ticket, please visit the Museum of London website

 

For more information, please email the event organisers, Dr Sara Dominici ([email protected]) and Dr Alison Hess ([email protected])

Speakers