Acknowledging interlockers as holders of unique expertise who should be actively engaged with as creative contributors or co-equal research partners is becoming increasingly common, especially in applied or intervention-focussed research. Drawing on experiences from recent and current research projects this talk shall explore what a Shared Dialogue Workshop is, and why using them can be incredibly powerful in applied research projects. This presentation shall be especially relevant to those interested in projects which include social AND natural scientists, and/or those who want to build interlocker insight into an output-design process from day one of a project.
Delivered by Dr Seumas Bates, Bangor University