| Qualification Type: | PhD |
|---|---|
| Location: | Bristol |
| Funding for: | UK Students |
| Funding amount: | Tax-exempt stipend, which is currently £20,780 (2025/26) per annum. In addition, full-time tuition fees will be covered for up to three years (Home). |
| Hours: | Full Time |
| Placed On: | 13th May 2026 |
|---|---|
| Closes: | 12th June 2026 |
| Reference: | 2627-OCT-CATE07 |
Start date - 1 October 2026
This studentship is based in the College of Arts, Technology and Environment.
Problem statement
Black and Global Majority communities continue to face structural constraints in defining, accessing, and governing their own cultural heritage data. Traditional archival systems rooted in colonial epistemologies, institutional custodianship, and extractive data practices determine what is preserved, how it is classified, and who retains authority. These logics frequently erase nuance, reproduce racialised forms of knowledge control, and limit community autonomy over memory, representation, and cultural interpretation.
The UnMuseum project, led by BSWN and supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund, represents a national project which has significant regional intervention into these inequities. BSWN, as a leading racial justice organisation in the South West and the lead partner of the National Lottery Heritage Fund supported UnMuseum project, positions the initiative as a collaborative research context rather than a delivery site, enabling the doctoral researcher to retain full critical independence.
Aim
To investigate and theorise how Black and Global Majority communities define, negotiate, and govern cultural heritage data through co-production and decolonial archival methodologies.
Objectives
Analyse community-led approaches to representation, metadata, classification, and custodianship.
Methodology
The research adopts a mixed-method and critically reflexive design informed by decolonial, participatory, and community-engaged approaches.
UWE Bristol’s facilities, including DCRC labs and The Bridge, may support prototyping, filming, and interactive design experiments.
Outcomes
The project sits at the centre of DCRC’s strengths in community media, digital cultures, participatory practice, and critical data studies. It directly aligns with RISE priority themes:
It also supports the diversification of UWE Bristol’s doctoral pipeline by enabling a Global Majority researcher to work at the intersection of heritage, racial justice, data, and media.
For more information about this studentship please contact Amanda Egbe at amanda.egbe@uwe.ac.uk.
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