The go-along research method
Laurie Taylor explores the 'go-along' research method with Alex Prior in Westminster’s corridors of power, and James Fletcher on how people with dementia navigate public transport.
How does the environment we move through shape the way we see and experience the world?
Laurie Taylor talks to Alex Prior (London South Bank University) about his research inside Westminster, where he walked alongside MPs and staff to uncover how the corridors of power feel different depending on who you are and what your job is.
James Fletcher from the University of Bath worked on a project exploring what it’s like to navigate the bus and tram routes of central Manchester while living with dementia. He looked at how familiar streets and transport systems change when memory and mobility are shifting and the implications of this.
What is the value of research conducted in this way and what are the downsides?
Producer: Natalia Fernandez
Last on
More episodes
Featured
.
Guests and Further Reading
Research paper: Go-Along Research in the UK Parliament
- James Fraser from the University of Bath
Paper:Navigating Dementia: Political Materialities of Public Transport in the All-Ageing Metropolis
Broadcasts
- Tue 3 Feb 202615:30BBC Radio 4
- Sun 8 Feb 202606:05BBC Radio 4
Explore further with The Open University
Podcast
![]()
Thinking Allowed
New research on how society works



