ERC Keynote Speaker Richard Budd

Richard Budd is a Lecturer in Higher Education in the School of Social Sciences at Lancaster University, UK. His research interests relate to conceptualising and investigating how different groups experience and negotiate studying at or working in universities. This incorporates relational and social justice questions around personal and professional identity, organisational cultures and practices, and the geographical and physical elements of university campuses. He is particularly interested in exploring how these questions compare on a domestic and international basis. Alongside and within this work, he is actively involved in moves to decolonise higher education and his own practice.

"Making Space for Socially Just Academic Practice"

As educational researchers our work often focuses on, and unveils, problems related to social inequalities in our curriculum and teaching practices, policies and funding, and working or learning conditions. While these play out varyingly across national and organisational contexts, the broader trends are still recognisable. We can generally see, for example, how academic selectivity operates in tension with inclusion, and that intellectual canons often exclude enriching, alternative perspectives. Similarly, drives towards efficiency may sideline deeper, slower forms of knowledge co-production, and excessive standardisation inhibits our capacity for the bespoke. In combination, this means that our educational systems are invariably somewhat dysfunctional, riven with entrenched structural barriers to acting and thinking as we might want to, even obscuring the exploration of better ways of doing things. The question within this is can we, as practitioners, reconcile these contradictions and in doing so promote greater equity and decency? If so, how?

This keynote first of all highlights the range of impediments to social justice that we face in education as a whole and in higher education in particular, recognising where these pressures stem from and how they are manifest. More importantly, though, it identifies where we can find and create gaps for making meaningful and positive differences in our teaching, research, and academic citizenship. Some of these can feel insignificant; on an individual basis they may be, but they can also have very real impact while cumulatively constituting – and contributing to – something far bigger. Others are more profound, and as we progress in our careers, the opportunities for making more space and fostering more fundamental changes will present themselves. In short, we start small and never stop, and through collaboration, reflection, and a little extra effort where possible, we get closer to the higher education we imagined was there.

Upcoming ECERs

Title
17.08.2026
ECER'26, Tampere
30.08.2027
ECER' 27, Debrecen
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Venue Address

Tampere University
City Centre Campus, Main Building
Kalevantie 4
33014 Tampere, Finland

Important Dates ECER 2026

Title
01.12.2025
Submission starts
31.01.2026
Submission ends
01.04.2026
Registration starts
01.04.2026
Review results announced
15.05.2026
Early bird ends
25.06.2026
Presentation times announced
30.06.2026
Registration Deadline for Presenters
17.08.2026
ERC First Day
18.08.2026
ECER First Day
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