Fully Funded PhD Opportunities at University of the West of England: Research Digital Futures, Immersive Technologies, and Decolonial Archiving in the UK
The University of the West of England (UWE Bristol) has announced two exciting fully funded PhD studentships within its College of Arts, Technology and Environment (CATE), offering researchers the opportunity to work on globally relevant issues at the intersection of technology, culture, sustainability, heritage, race, and digital innovation.
Hosted by the renowned Digital Cultures Research Centre (DCRC), these PhD opportunities provide full tuition coverage alongside an annual tax-free stipend of £20,780 to support living expenses during the three-year doctoral programme.
The opportunities are open to both UK and international applicants and will commence on 1 October 2026.
Applicants interested in immersive technologies, environmental justice, community media, decolonial knowledge systems, cultural heritage, digital storytelling, and creative technologies are strongly encouraged to apply.
Overview of the Fully Funded PhD Studentships
Host Institution
University of the West of England (UWE Bristol)
Research Centre
Digital Cultures Research Centre (DCRC)
Funding Coverage
Successful candidates will receive:
- Full tuition fee coverage for up to three years
- Annual tax-exempt stipend of £20,780
- Access to research facilities and creative labs
- Career and professional development support
- Opportunities for collaboration with cultural organisations, technologists, policymakers, and community partners
Start Date
1 October 2026
Application Deadline
12 June 2026
Interview Period
Expected in early July 2026
PhD Opportunity 1: Reimagining Just and Low-Carbon Immersive Futures
About the Studentship
Immersive technologies such as virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), and generative artificial intelligence (AI) are rapidly reshaping global creative and cultural industries. However, the rapid growth of these technologies has also intensified concerns around environmental sustainability, digital colonialism, extractive economies, electronic waste, and unequal global power structures.
This fully funded PhD seeks to critically examine how immersive technologies can evolve into more sustainable, just, and environmentally responsible systems.
The project will explore:
- The environmental impact of immersive technologies
- Carbon-intensive digital infrastructures
- Resource extraction linked to hardware manufacturing
- Global supply chains and technological inequality
- Digital colonialism and power imbalances
- Sustainable and regenerative immersive practices
- Post-extractive technological futures
- Environmental justice in creative technology industries
Researchers will also investigate how policymakers, cultural organisations, and immersive practitioners can collectively build low-carbon pathways for the future of immersive media and digital creativity.
Why This Research Matters
The immersive technology sector is growing at an unprecedented pace. However, this growth often relies on:
- Energy-intensive computing systems
- Rapid cycles of technological obsolescence
- Unsustainable hardware production
- Resource extraction that disproportionately affects communities in the Global South
This PhD addresses urgent global concerns by asking:
- What would a low-carbon immersive ecosystem look like?
- How can immersive technologies become regenerative rather than extractive?
- How can creative industries support environmental justice?
- What role can cultural organisations play in reshaping digital futures?
Research Environment
The successful candidate will be based at the Digital Cultures Research Centre within the Pervasive Media Studio at Watershed in Bristol.
The university is also a leading UK institution supporting immersive arts development and sustainable digital research infrastructure, creating strong opportunities for impactful and collaborative research.
Practice-Based Research Opportunities
UWE Bristol welcomes:
- Traditional research-focused PhD proposals
- Practice-led research approaches
- Creative experimental projects
- Standalone creative works
- Iterative low-carbon immersive productions
Candidates are encouraged to develop their own research questions aligned with the broad themes of sustainability, immersive media, justice, and creative technology.
PhD Opportunity 2: Co-Production and Decolonial Archiving
About the Studentship
This fully funded PhD investigates how Black and Global Majority communities can reclaim authority over cultural heritage, archival systems, and digital memory infrastructures through co-production and decolonial methodologies.
The research is connected to the UnMuseum project, a major initiative led by BSWN and supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund.
The project focuses on addressing long-standing inequalities in archival systems, particularly the ways colonial knowledge structures continue to shape:
- Cultural preservation
- Metadata systems
- Classification standards
- Access to heritage records
- Ownership and custodianship of cultural memory
Core Research Themes
The studentship explores several interconnected themes, including:
1. Decolonial Archiving
Examining how colonial systems influence the preservation and classification of heritage data.
2. Community-Governed Cultural Data
Investigating alternative models where communities control their own cultural narratives, memory systems, and heritage infrastructures.
3. Co-Production Methodologies
Working collaboratively with communities to shape ethical and participatory research processes.
4. Critical Data Studies
Understanding how power operates within digital infrastructures and data governance systems.
5. Digital Storytelling and Media Innovation
Using film, audio, digital storytelling, and experimental archives as research tools and creative outputs.
Research Objectives
The PhD aims to:
- Analyse community-led approaches to metadata and cultural representation
- Critique colonial archival systems and knowledge structures
- Develop alternative frameworks for community-controlled cultural data
- Experiment with innovative archival models
- Explore ethical and participatory digital heritage practices
- Create new methodologies for community media and digital humanities research
Methodology and Research Approach
The project adopts a mixed-method and practice-based research model that includes:
Community Collaboration
Working directly with UnMuseum partners, community curators, and participants.
Decolonial Analysis
Critically analysing metadata structures, heritage systems, and archival workflows.
Practice-Based Inquiry
Producing:
- Prototype micro-archives
- Experimental metadata systems
- Digital storytelling artefacts
- Community-led media projects
Dynamic and Evolving Research
As the UnMuseum develops, the doctoral research will adapt to emerging community priorities, tensions, and innovations.
Facilities and Research Support
Researchers may access:
- DCRC Labs
- The Bridge creative facilities
- Filming and prototyping resources
- Interactive design support
- Community media networks
- Collaborative cultural research environments
The project also aligns with UWE Bristol’s major themes around:
- Culture and Community
- Creative Technologies
- Justice-Oriented Futures
- Ethical Data Governance
- Anti-Colonial Research Practices
Who Can Apply?
Both opportunities welcome applications from:
- UK students
- International students
- Practice-based researchers
- Creative technologists
- Media researchers
- Community practitioners
- Artists and digital storytellers
- Researchers interested in sustainability, race, heritage, immersive media, or digital culture
Applicants must meet doctoral entry requirements at UWE Bristol and submit:
- A research proposal
- Degree certificates and transcripts
- English language qualification (if applicable)
- Two academic or professional referees
Why These Opportunities Stand Out
These PhD programmes are unique because they combine:
- Full financial support
- Interdisciplinary research
- Practice-led innovation
- Real-world cultural impact
- Access to leading research networks
- Opportunities to influence future technology and heritage systems
For researchers interested in socially engaged innovation, digital justice, sustainability, immersive technologies, or decolonial futures, these studentships represent exceptional opportunities to contribute meaningful and globally relevant research.
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