For Researchers
Expand Your Methodological Toolkit Without Abandoning Rigor
If you're drawn to community-engaged scholarship but feel constrained by institutional expectations, publication pressures, or concerns about methodological legitimacy—this research offers pathways forward.
Five graduate researchers from transdisciplinary design, public health, sociology, educational psychology, and theological studies discovered that studying authentic relational communities required becoming one themselves. Their 10-week fellowship generated methodological innovations that don't replace conventional research approaches but expand what counts as rigorous scholarly inquiry. Here’s what you’ll gain from this research:
Where to Start
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The key insights represent the core methodological contributions. Each insight emerged through sustained collaborative inquiry and offers practical approaches you can integrate into your own community-based work:
Identity & Positionality as Research Resource: How to work with (not against) who you are in relationship to communities you study
Community Wisdom + Academic Rigor: Navigating institutional constraints while honoring non-academic knowledge systems
Relationship as Primary Methodology: Researching what can be felt but not easily measured
Language as Collaborative Bridge-Building: Developing relational literacy beyond verbal communication
Creative Expression as Knowledge Creation: Artistic practices as valid forms of scholarly inquiry
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defines practical concepts like "cascading vulnerability," "productive tension," "relational accountability," and "al-ghaib" (the unseen/veiled knowledge)—terms you can immediately apply to articulate relational dimensions of your research.
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The future directions section includes specific guidance you can adapt: IRB protocols for relational research, tenure criteria that value community partnerships, and funding models that support relationship-building before data collection
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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 emerged through cogenerative dialogue - thinking together out loud in ways that honored everyone's voice and experience. Rather than dividing tasks and reporting findings, the fellows engaged in sustained collaborative inquiry where the most profound discoveries came from noticing how their own relationships shifted as they learned to trust each other with questions, vulnerabilities, and evolving understandings.
The research demonstrates how paying attention to relationships - both with communities you're studying and with fellow researchers - reveals insights that observation, surveys, or interviews alone cannot capture. As IRH Fellow Ayman Mir asked: "How do you research things you can feel but can't easily measure?" The 5 Insights offer concrete methodological responses to this essential question.
Each insight includes stories from the fellows' experiences, emerging questions for inquiry, and connections to practice. As you read, consider: What aspects of your research feel constrained by conventional methods? Where might relational approaches open new pathways?
Critical Questions This Research Addresses
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The fellowship demonstrates that rigor and relationship aren't opposing forces. Relational approaches expand your methodological toolkit - working alongside quantitative and qualitative methods to access dimensions of community life that traditional approaches miss.
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Insight #1 offers frameworks for embracing positionality as data rather than bias. Your lived experiences shape what you can understand - acknowledging this openly increases transparency and methodological integrity.
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The fellows discovered that staying committed to connection even through unbridgeable differences creates space for more honest collaboration. You don't have to pretend experiences are the same or easily translatable.
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IUse the documented transformations in the "Lessons Learned" section and institutional recommendations in "Future Directions" to make cases for relational research infrastructure, alternative success metrics, and capacity-building activities.
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This research provides evidence and language for defending methodological choices. The fellows' work demonstrates measurable outcomes from relational approaches while maintaining scholarly credibility.
Take Action
Reflect on your positionality
How do your identities and lived experiences shape what you can understand about community? What would change if you viewed these as research resources rather than biases to control?
Seek collaborative opportunities
Look for fellowship programs, research collectives, or cohort-based models that support learning with others rather than in isolation. Consider forming a transdisciplinary inquiry group at your institution.
Experiment with creative methods
What aspects of your research topic might be better understood through artistic expression, embodied practices, or collaborative worldmaking? How might visual, somatic, or performative approaches complement your existing methods?
Join our next cohort
Applications for the 2026 Summer Fellowship open in late winter 2026. This intensive 10-week program brings together graduate scholars whose research centers on relational and community-focused inquiry. Visit integrativerelationalhealth.com/fellowship to learn more.
Connect with us
We're building a network of researchers committed to relational approaches. Share your work, ask questions, or explore collaboration opportunities at info@integrativerelationalhealth.com.

