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How can podcasting become more than a way to share research—and actually become part of the research itself?
In this episode of Continuing Studies, Neil and Jen talk with Abigail Harrison Moore from the University of Leeds about Whose Power, a podcast project created with the Preservative Party, a group of young curators at Leeds City Museum. Abigail shares how the project uses podcasting as a participatory research space—one built around trust, consent, listening, and shared authorship.
The conversation explores how podcasting can help break down gatekeeping in museums and academia, why audio can capture things that written research often misses, and what it takes to create a safe space where young people can lead the conversation. Abigail also explains why the project is staying audio-only, how voice, accents, pauses, and emotion became part of the research, and why participatory work requires much more preparation than simply turning on the mics.
It’s a thoughtful look at how podcasting can open doors, shift power, and help researchers learn with communities—not just speak about them.
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Join us at Higher Ed Pod Con in Cleveland, OH, July 16 - 17 2026
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By Jennifer-Lee Gunson & Neil McPhedran. HigherEdPods.com. Podium Podcast Co.How can podcasting become more than a way to share research—and actually become part of the research itself?
In this episode of Continuing Studies, Neil and Jen talk with Abigail Harrison Moore from the University of Leeds about Whose Power, a podcast project created with the Preservative Party, a group of young curators at Leeds City Museum. Abigail shares how the project uses podcasting as a participatory research space—one built around trust, consent, listening, and shared authorship.
The conversation explores how podcasting can help break down gatekeeping in museums and academia, why audio can capture things that written research often misses, and what it takes to create a safe space where young people can lead the conversation. Abigail also explains why the project is staying audio-only, how voice, accents, pauses, and emotion became part of the research, and why participatory work requires much more preparation than simply turning on the mics.
It’s a thoughtful look at how podcasting can open doors, shift power, and help researchers learn with communities—not just speak about them.
Episode Links:
Connect with Us:
Chapters:
Join us at Higher Ed Pod Con in Cleveland, OH, July 16 - 17 2026
Sign up by May 29 for Early Bird Pricing