For Researchers

Invest in Research Infrastructure That Creates Sustainable Impact

If you fund community-engaged research, you've likely seen this pattern: promising short-term projects that don't lead to lasting change, community partnerships that dissolve when funding ends, or researchers who struggle to balance rigorous scholarship with genuine community relationship-building.

This fellowship demonstrates a different approach - one that produces both scholarly rigor and sustainable community impact by funding relational infrastructure, not just project outputs.

Five graduate researchers from diverse disciplines collaborated intensively for 10 weeks, creating a living laboratory for authentic relational communities. Their work generated methodological innovations with implications for how funders can support community-engaged scholarship that honors both academic standards and community wisdom. Here’s what you’ll gain from this research:

Where to Start

  • Learn about the Summer 2025 Graduate Research Fellowship to see the program structure, participant selection, and collaborative approach. The model demonstrates how bringing together diverse disciplinary perspectives in sustained relationship creates knowledge that belongs to the collective journey rather than individual portfolios.

  • The Lessons Learned section documents concrete outcomes in three categories:

    • Individual transformations —How each fellow's research approach and professional trajectory shifted through the experience

    • Methodological contributions — Specific tools and frameworks generated through collaborative inquiry

    • Institutional implications — Pathways for scaling these approaches across academic settings

  • The Future Directions section provides actionable guidance you can integrate into your funding strategies:

    • Grant cycle structures that allow time for trust-building

    • Budget categories for activities that build relational foundation

    • New success metrics that value depth, transformation, and community flourishing

    • Evaluation frameworks for relationship quality and sustainability

  • Share your insights and experiences in practice with us. Tag us on social media, or join our IRH Wisdom Network to become a part of our online practice communities.

Explore the Key Insights: Approaching Research Through an Embodied Relational Lens

These insights form the methodological core of the fellowship's discoveries. They demonstrate how community-engaged research can move from knowledge extraction to knowledge co-creation through sustained, embodied relationship-building.

Each insight offers both theoretical framing and practical implications for research design, evaluation, and institutional support. Together, the fellows create an approach that bridges community wisdom with scholarly rigor, honoring both relationship-centered practices and traditional academic methods.

As you review these insights, consider: What would change in your funding strategy if you viewed relationships not as nice-to-have context for research, but as essential infrastructure for sustainable community impact?

Explore the 5 Key Insights

Critical Questions This Research Addresses

  • The fellowship demonstrates that relational approaches don't mean abandoning rigor or measurable outcomes. Instead, they expand what counts as evidence - including relationship quality indicators, community capacity development, and documented transformation alongside traditional metrics.

  • Rather than replicating identical programs across contexts, scalability means creating transferable frameworks and infrastructure that communities can adapt to their specific needs. The fellowship model itself is scalable - the insights and practices can be implemented across diverse institutional settings.

  • The research offers concrete tools: measures of sustained collaboration beyond funding periods, community ownership of research findings, documented shifts in institutional practices, and ripple effects showing how research relationships catalyze additional community-led initiatives.

  • Because meaningful impact requires relational foundation. This research shows that activities building trust, developing community research capacity, and creating space for co-design - even those without quarterly reports - are essential for sustainable change that persists beyond grant cycles.

  • The fellowship offers a proven model: bringing together scholars from different disciplines in sustained relationship, creating structures for cogenerative dialogue, and funding collaborative inquiry that generates knowledge none of the individual researchers could have produced alone.

Investment Opportunities

Fund the next fellowship cohort
Support the 2026 Summer Fellowship, bringing together graduate scholars whose research centers on relational and community-focused inquiry. This 10-week intensive program creates methodological innovations with ripple effects across participants' institutions and communities.

Pilot new grant structures
Partner with us to test funding models that support relationship-building: planning grants for community co-design, flexible budgets for emergent community needs, and multi-year commitments that allow sustainable partnerships to develop.

Support institutional infrastructure
Invest in the structures that enable relational research: community partnership offices, cohort-based graduate programs, dedicated spaces for community-university gatherings, and professional development in relational research methods.

Create a network of relational research funders
Join other foundations and funding organizations committed to supporting community-engaged scholarship differently. Share learnings, develop shared evaluation frameworks, and collectively shift expectations about what community research can achieve.

Schedule a conversation
Discuss partnership opportunities to expand this fellowship model or pilot new grant structures. Contact us at info@integrativerelationalhealth.com.