EDICa’s Research Themes
EDICa’s research is split into three themes described here.
Home » Research projects
Workstream 1 – Career Lifecycle
We aim to identify relationships between key career and life events and their mutual impacts, making recommendations for reducing barriers to inclusion across the career.
Examples: recruitment, selection, socialisation, performance appraisal, and life course events such as perimenopause, caring responsibilities, health, disability & neurodiversity.
Previous research by EDICa’s team has highlighted the particularly gendered nature of ill health and disability within research careers in relation to managing menstrual health, for example restricting access to field work. Stigma and poor facilities for those managing menstrual health and (peri)menopause (and intersections with age, disability and gender) are a key area for EDICa to create rapid solutions to inclusion. Click here to read more.
Further studies in this workstream have been commissioned through the first round of Flexible Fund. Following a co-design process with funders UKRI and the British Academy, the projects look at Covid-19’s impact on inequalities. Project topics include the degree awarding gap for Black and other minoritised students; women with mental health issues; early career researchers; and disabled researchers career progress with intersections with race, gender and caring responsibilities. Click here to read more here.
Workstream 2 – Research Process
We aim to determine how EDI can be embedded in the research process and impact those career-defining decisions, like funding and publications.
We want to know what works, in what context, and why?
Examples: conception of projects, their conduct, evaluation and dissemination including fieldwork, lab work, mobility (travelling for work), dissemination and impact.
We recruited a cohort of “Equity Champions” from across the UK’s research & innovation ecosystem. With this group we are testing methods to increase the diversity literacy of researchers and research leaders, and co-design and evaluate strategies for embedding equity across research activities. Click here to read more.
We examined recent literature about the impact of bias on the reviewing and assessing process for research funding. We continued the conversation by hosting two seminars on peer review bias and the various proposed solutions to address bias.
The second round of Flexible Funding focused on the research process. Successful projects will be announced and shared on this webpage.
Open plan working
Workstream 3 – Organisation of work
We aim to identify how work can be organised in a variety of research workplaces to create enabling workspaces.
Examples: labs, offices, fieldwork, workloads, working patterns, hybrid working, workspace, remote working, and industrial relations.
We will co-design practical strategies for creating workplaces and workspaces that enable all researchers to thrive.
This workstream’s activities were programmed to follow a bedrock of research from the first two workstreams. During the first year, the workstream conducted a major study looking at Covid-19’s impact on inequalities. Click here to read more.
The final round of Flexible Funding is focusing on the organisation of work and enabling workspaces. The deadline for Expressions of Interest is 30 September, and for full proposals on 31 October. Click here to find out more.
Check out EDICa’s Resources
EDICa hosts a regular blog and seminars, as well as collecting a library of resources of equality, diversity & inclusion practices in research & innovation.
Report on peer review bias in the funding process
Date: 4th April 2024
Evidence review on peer review bias in the funding process.
Report on recommendations for improving support for managing menstrual health
Date: 10th June 2024
Report
Report on “Recommendations for improving support for researchers
managing menstrual health”
Disabled people are missing from Antarctic EDI work: how do we fix it?
Date: 23 May 2024
A guest blog by Alice Oates, a 2023 Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research (SCAR) Fellow.