Metadata
Title
The power of storytelling
Category
general
UUID
dd445fb903c14ddfa2851009920b1a86
Source URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/storytelling/
Parent URL
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/
Crawl Time
2026-03-24T00:02:07+00:00
Rendered Raw Markdown

The power of storytelling

Source: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/storytelling/ Parent: https://www.lboro.ac.uk/research/spotlights/

Using storytelling to give people access to public debates about issues that impact their lives

Language can include or exclude. Important public policy discussions are frequently conducted in highly academic, technocratic or bureaucratic specialist language – making them inaccessible to the very people they most need to engage.

This is often the case with the public debate around climate change and its environmental challenges – and the communities most likely to be impacted can become most excluded from important discussions.

Our practice-based research has used storytelling to make public conversations about environmental issues more universally accessible.

Our impact

Empowering individuals and communities

Organisational practice and policy

Dissemination and ongoing learning

My Mark: My City project in Korogocho, Nairobi with Hope Raisers and UN-Live

The first iteration of ‘The Reasons’ in rural Cambridgeshire

The research

Applied storytelling for active citizenship, community resilience and environmental action

The underpinning research – comprising several Research Council funded projects in the UK and Kenya – dates back more than a decade with significant developments since 2014.

It is grounded in the concept that storytelling provides an alternative – and very powerful – way of accessing experiential and traditional knowledge, interrogating issues, expressing values and shaping behaviour.

The work to date has focused on the role of storytelling as a tool in developing public engagement and effective policy-making specifically in areas relating to environmental issues, including water management, sustainable transport and waste management.

Practice-based initiatives have been co-created with communities and local organisations, bringing new knowledge and previously unheard voices to public debates by combining traditional and digital narration to create new forms of hybrid storytelling.

Work continues to be funded and is ongoing.

We want to expand our digital storytelling activity around social and environmental issues in the whole country because this approach enables us to have impact at a larger scale.

Daniel Onyango Hope Raisers Initiative, Kenya

Research funders

Several Research Council funding streams, including

Our work is also supported by

Development partners

We work with a range of

Meet the experts

Professor Michael Wilson

Professor of Drama – Creative Arts

Dr Antonia Liguori

Professor of Participatory Storytelling and Public Policy

Read more about Michael's research