What is a researcher in residence?
A Researcher-in-Residence (RiR) or embedded researcher is a university employed and supervised researcher who is placed within the system that they are evaluating or researching, either virtually or via co-location.
This model allows co-design and co-undertaking of studies that are of real benefit to the systems and stakeholders they work with. A balance is created between ‘research’ and ‘evaluation’, and ‘relevance’ and ‘rigour’: agendas are set locally, resources and capacity for mutual learning are pooled, insights are more contextually rich, feedback is faster than traditional research programmes, allowing for rapid response and live changes to systems; yet rigour is maintained via University standards, and mixed methodological approaches.
Embedded research ‘anchors’ partnerships between Universities and Voluntary/Public Services to create social value with local communities to mutual benefit of a local knowledge economy.
RiR's are comparable in many ways to the octopus - a fascinating and underrated creature. Both share skills and qualities that help with adapting to situations and creating solutions, such as resilience, intelligence, flexible learning, and the ability to utilise different tools and environments to overcome problems.