The Preservative Party with Professor Abigail Harrison Moore
12 episodes
1 day ago
Whose Power? is a podcast that explores the power of participation and seeks to amplify the voices of young people to create new knowledge and understanding.
The podcast is a collaboration between Abigail Harrison Moore from the University of Leeds and The Preservative Party, a group of young curators at Leeds City Museum who empower young people to break down traditional barriers and influence the way museum exhibitions and events are curated and presented. Together they’ve been exploring how participation can help us better understand power, who has it, and how it’s used in different settings.
Join Abigail in conversation with members of the Preservative Party as they talk about what power means to them and to hear about their own experiences of participating in research that seeks to create new knowledge through and with young people.
Whose Power? is produced with funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council and with podcast production support from Research Podcasts.
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Whose Power? is a podcast that explores the power of participation and seeks to amplify the voices of young people to create new knowledge and understanding.
The podcast is a collaboration between Abigail Harrison Moore from the University of Leeds and The Preservative Party, a group of young curators at Leeds City Museum who empower young people to break down traditional barriers and influence the way museum exhibitions and events are curated and presented. Together they’ve been exploring how participation can help us better understand power, who has it, and how it’s used in different settings.
Join Abigail in conversation with members of the Preservative Party as they talk about what power means to them and to hear about their own experiences of participating in research that seeks to create new knowledge through and with young people.
Whose Power? is produced with funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council and with podcast production support from Research Podcasts.
In Episode 1 of Whose Power? we find out how and why Professor Abigail Harrison Moore from the University of Leeds started researching histories of women and energy in the home with an inspiring group of young curators based at Leeds City Museum.
Abigail is joined by Esther Amis-Hughes, Community Engagement Manager at Leeds City Museum who set up the Preservative Party 13 years ago. She's also joined by Youth Engagement Curator Jordan Keighley, an original member of the group, now its facilitator.
Together they discuss how the group is working to empower young people to break down traditional barriers to influence and drive the way museum exhibitions are curated and presented, what participating in academic research means to them, what barriers and challenges they have faced along the way, and how they have helped to create new knowledge and bring about meaningful change in the sector with and for the young people they support.
Further reading
Read a full transcript of the episode
Empowering Women; Co-producing Histories of Women and Energy in the Home (AHRC funding page)
Open minds with the Preservative Party (Blog)
Episode credits
Presenter: Abigail Harrison Moore, University of Leeds
Guests: Jordan Keighley and Esther Amis-Hughes, Leeds City Museum
Producer: Chris Garrington, Research Podcasts
Studio and sound: Kerr Hunter and Alex Neish, Helix, University of Leeds
Music: Aura, by Tae, Preservative Party
Artwork and graphics: Preservative Party with Krissie Brighty-Glover, Research Podcasts
Photography: Andrew Lord
Whose Power?
Whose Power? is a podcast that explores the power of participation and seeks to amplify the voices of young people to create new knowledge and understanding.
The podcast is a collaboration between Abigail Harrison Moore from the University of Leeds and The Preservative Party, a group of young curators at Leeds City Museum who empower young people to break down traditional barriers and influence the way museum exhibitions and events are curated and presented. Together they’ve been exploring how participation can help us better understand power, who has it, and how it’s used in different settings.
Join Abigail in conversation with members of the Preservative Party as they talk about what power means to them and to hear about their own experiences of participating in research that seeks to create new knowledge through and with young people.
Whose Power? is produced with funding from the Arts and Humanities Research Council and with podcast production support from Research Podcasts.