Past Events Archive
The below is just some of the events that have been run at Methods North West and our associated teams at our partner Universities.
This year’s Thursday lunchtime seminars can be found here.
2023/24
Using Mixed Methods in Logistics and Supply Chain Management Research: Current State and Future Directions
Thursday 11 December
12 – 1pm, online
Speaker: Dr Witold Bahr (Keele University)
In this Methods North West Lunchtime Seminar, Witold will present a review of mixed methods research across ten years in LSCM to determine their usage, identify benefits and inhibitors, and provide suggestions for LSCM researchers to realise the benefits from using mixed methods.
Dr. Witold Bahr is a Lecturer in Operations Management at Keele Business School. His current research focuses on exploring new and disruptive technologies for supply chains, sustainability, and addressing the gap between theory and practice.
Writing and Researching Differently through Fictocriticism
Thursday 4 December
12 – 1pm, online
Speaker: Dr Mark Gatto (Northumbria University)
In this Methods North West Lunchtime Seminar, Mark Gatto will be exploring gender, work & care through dystopian fictocriticism to challenge patriarchal norms and inspire inclusive change.
In recent years, more scholarship has turned to embodied writing, embracing messiness and blurring lines between empirical and personal data. This session will provide one such personal narrative of undertaking and pursuing a form of research/writing that aspires to a critical and boundary blurring writing, grounded in masculinities theory and empirical data, while also developing a style that aligns with fictions that move and inspire us.
MethodsLab: Listening to the non-speaking experience
Friday, 7 November
11am – 4:30pm
Speakers: Dr Holly Sutherland, Dr Verity Ward, Dr Jill Bradshaw, Freddie Jones
This MethodsLab is a full-day event at the University of Manchester focused on developing ethical and effective qualitative methods for including non-speaking neurodiverse young people in research. Bringing together academics, practitioners, parents, and autistic young adults (18+), it will feature talks, posters, and hands-on activities to explore and test different approaches.
Co-created with neurodiverse participants, the event will produce inclusive research guidelines and foster a collaborative community of practice.
Visualising Multivariate Data with Topological Data Analysis Ball Mapper
A Methods North West Seminar
Thursday 9 October
12 – 1pm, online
Speaker: Simon Rudkin
Data visualisation is a core component of the empirical process, from data exploration to the evaluation of models. However, visualising datasets with many continuous variables is challenging. To see the shape of data, scatter plots (and their derivatives) are the go-to graphics. Considering each variable as a dimension on the page, we are limited to two directions, with other variables needing to be captured in size or colour. Many solutions to viewing multi-dimensional data involve loss of information in dimensionality reduction, or combine many plots of subsets of variables.
Topological Data Analysis Ball Mapper is a means to create an abstract two-dimensional visualisation of multivariate data without loss of information. A motivation for the method, outline of the algorithm, and look at the research agenda developing the method are provided. This seminar explains why we all need to consider the structure of our data and place data visualisation at the core of our empirical analyses.
This is a precursor to a methods@manchester workshop on Topological Data Analysis Ball Mapper, which will run later in the Autumn.
Stitching at the End of the World – MNW
Wednesday 12 September
10am – 4pm, Manchester Museum
Speaker: Lydia Donohue
A one-day workshop to carry out a collaborative stitching programme. Inspired by the art project Kill Your Phone an open workshop format.
The day will involve the hands-on sewing of phone pouches using EMS fabric (a Faraday material) that shields devices from electromagnetic signals. During the workshop, participants will engage with notions of cybersecurity, personal privacy, the future of digital technology, and the application of ‘smart textiles’.
The workshop will open dialogues about the implications of future fabrics, the possibilities they offer and possible other applications in our digital world. This event will promote the application of craft-making as a methodological device for participants to engage with contemporary and pressing discourses within academia and current affairs.
Materialising the interdisciplinary collaboration between material sciences, craft and anthropology, it will explore how seemingly intangible topics such as radio signals, technological and cellular eavesdropping, voice recognition, and GPS tracking can be engaged with creatively through making practices.
2021/22 – 2022/23
Click on the below events titles to be taken to the full event description:
- Multiple Imputation in practice
- The Power of Story-Telling: Tensions and Dilemmas
- Experience of Mixed Methods Approach to Criminological Research
- Development & application of a qualitative rapid analysis approach
- The Elephant in the dark: Power, habitus and decolonisation
- Large Language Models in Accounting & Finance, Introducing Fintext Project
- Building and Managing Digital Archives: theories, practices, and challenges
- The Change Laboratory: A Research Methodology for Engendering Change
- Dee-Constructing Human & Non-Human Relations: Acoustic Recording in the Dee
- Multispecies methods
- Researching the Life-Course Creatively
- Digital diaries as a decolnising method
- Using data analytics in equality, diversity & inclusion in higher education
- Activism as method
- Using Teams/Zoom Captions or Word Transcription
- The Body Is Electric: Using Bodily Responses to Explore Behavioural Sciences
- MethodsX Archival Stream Meeting: What is an archive?
- Unpacking market controversies using the Cartography of Controversies
- Using Instagram as a tool for social research
- Doing Interpretive Research
- What is Lived Experience? Towards a Biography of a Concept
- The power of the pen: Prisoners’ letters to explore extreme imprisonment
- Data-Powered Positive Deviance
- Using machine learning and natural language processing
- Decolonising Methods
- First Steps with Variational Bayes
- An introduction to Corpus-Assisted Discourse Analysis for social scientists
- Studying Violence: Concepts, Approaches and Challenges
- Post-structuralist approaches to critical discourse analysis
- Methods NorthWest Conference 2022
- Discovery-led approaches in the digital archive
- The use of civic hackathons as co-learning spaces for peer research
- Metaphors of menopause and how to analyse them
- Diverse economies: anticapitalocentric, hopeful reading for better worlds
- Hour ahead stock price forecasting: A comparative analysis of machine learning and deep learning models for high frequency financial time-series data
- Critically Considering Indigenizing initiatives in the curriculum in Canada
- Mixed Methods Approaches: Exploring the Impact of Work Placements
- A narrative orientated literature review
- Using Story Completion Narratives with Teachers | Speaker: Shirley Hewitt
- Digital fieldwork: Ethnography and exploration in digital spaces
- Data discovery for secondary analysis projects
- Conceptual analysis
- Stakeholder engagement in data science research
- Synthesizing qualitative research
- Researching recreational drug taking in the home
- Psychoanalysis as Methodology
- Using Agent-based Models to explore social phenomenon
- Metaphors of menopause and how to analyse them
- Diverse economies: anticapitalocentric, hopeful reading for better worlds
- An Introduction to Time Series Analysis and Forecasting
