A paint rainbow
QUAHRC Seminar Series

Rethinking Power in Autism Research: Intersectional, Participatory, and Afrocentric Futures?

This facilitated conversation brings together Olivia Matshabane and Monique Botha to examine how power, inclusion, and knowledge operate across neurodiversity research. Drawing on Olivia’s and other African scholars’ scholarship thinking about African neuroethics, cultural humility, and community-centred models of care, and Monique’s scholarship on neurodiversity as a collective, activist-led framework, the discussion will question whose knowledge shapes research agendas and whose lives are marginalised by dominant clinical and academic models. Together, they will explore what more accountable, political and decolonial directions in neurodiversity research might look like.

More info
A man holding aloft a Palestinian flag during a protest
QUAHRC Seminar Series

Health Research Under Siege

Since October 7 2023, hundreds of Palestinian medics and healthcare workers killed or detained, all 12 universities in Gaza have been destroyed, and healthcare facilities have been decimated including at time of recording 20 out of 22 hospitals in Northern Gaza. Amidst this devastation, conducting qualitative and participatory health research presents profound challenges and moral dilemmas. This seminar explores the how Palestinian researchers have reacted and adapted.

Watch now
A laptop screen is out of focus in the background, with the many windows of an online zoom meeting open. To the left in the foreground, a houseplant in a white pot sits on the desk
QUAHRC Seminar Series

Joe Whelan on Narratives Beyond Interpretation

Dr Joe Whelan from Trinity College Dublin explores research using shared walking as an arts based, biographical method.

Watch now
A laptop screen is out of focus in the background, with the many windows of an online zoom meeting open. To the left in the foreground, a houseplant in a white pot sits on the desk
QUAHRC Seminar Series

Alicia Stringfellow on the Biographical Narrative Interpretive Method

At this seminar, Alicia Stringfellow presents the use of the Biographical Narrative Interpretive Method to facilitate storytelling with marginalised groups.

Watch now
A laptop screen is out of focus in the background, with the many windows of an online zoom meeting open. To the left in the foreground, a houseplant in a white pot sits on the desk
QUAHRC Seminar Series

Robyn Fivush on Family Storytelling and Child Well-Being

Robyn Fivush presents this seminar on family storytelling and child well-being, discussing work from the Family Narratives Lab at Emory University

Watch now
A laptop screen is out of focus in the background, with the many windows of an online zoom meeting open. To the left in the foreground, a houseplant in a white pot sits on the desk
QUAHRC Seminar Series

It takes time to develop interpretive depth in qualitative research

Shira Birnbaum presents this seminar titled ‘It Takes Time to Develop Interpretive Depth in Qualitative Research: A Cautionary Note and Some Pedagogical Strategies from the Front Lines of Nursing Education’

Watch now
A laptop screen is out of focus in the background, with the many windows of an online zoom meeting open. To the left in the foreground, a houseplant in a white pot sits on the desk
QUAHRC Seminar Series

Does qualitative health research need ethics committees?

Qualitative health researchers are on a journey to becoming more reflective, ethical and supportive researchers, but do we need university ethics committees to do this? Sohail Jannesari, Nooshin Asgari, and Stan Papoulias discuss

Watch now
A laptop screen is out of focus in the background, with the many windows of an online zoom meeting open. To the left in the foreground, a houseplant in a white pot sits on the desk
QUAHRC Seminar Series

Dr Michelle O’Reilly on exploring the challenges of doing applied qualitative research

The first event in the QUAHRC Seminar Series

Watch now