School of Social and Political Science

Dr Emma Davidson

Job Title

Senior Lecturer in Social Policy and Qualitative Research Methods

Photo
Emma Davidson

Room number

2.05

Building (Address)

Chrystal Macmillan Building

Street (Address)

15a George Square

City (Address)

Edinburgh

Country (Address)

UK

Post code (Address)

EH8 9LD

Research interests

Research interests

Community and belonging; community-led research; social infrastructure; social inequalities; social class; youth work; young people; public libraries; qualitative research; big qual

Background

I am a social researcher interested in how, as academics, we can use our research to meaningfully reveal and tackle social inequalities. I typically draw on collaborative and and arts-informed methods that can help understand people and their lives from their own vantage points. My research interest is broadly concerned with community identity and understanding the social infrastructures that support community belonging, trust and tolerance. Areas of research include community life, social infrastructure and civil society. My work is often based in and around community settings, including family support, youth work and public library services.

I completed my PhD at the University Edinburgh in Social Policy in 2013. I joined the University as lecturer in 2020. Prior to this, I worked as a researcher in urban studies at Heriot Watt University, and was a social housing consultant at DTZ Pieda (Edinburgh). 

Qualifications

PhD, Social Policy, University of Edinburgh

MSc in Childhood Studies, University of Edinburgh

MSc in Housing and Urban Studies, Edinburgh College of Art

BA, Sociology, University of Edinburgh

Current Roles

I am a co-director of the Binks Hub, a new initiative supported by the Binks Trust. Our mission at the Binks is to support a bold network of researchers, practitioners, policy-makers and community members committed to investigating how to tackle the issues that matter most to people, driving real-world, positive change.

I am also co-director at the cross-institution and multi-disciplinary consortium, Centre for Research on Families and Relationships. The Centre is a unique research network, with an aim to connect policy makers, practitioners and academics in research on families and relationships. I am a co-editor of the journal Scottish Affairs, Scotland’s longest running journal on contemporary political and social issues.

I am a Board member at Stepping Stones (North Edinburgh), a voluntary organisation that provides support services to young parent families and pregnant women living in the North Edinburgh area. I am also a member of Craigmillar Literacy Trust, a charity focused on empowering the community through literacy. 

Current Teaching

Social Inequalities and the Lifecourse; 2nd semester (honours).

Research Skills: Data Collection in the Social Sciences; 1st semester (PG)

I run Advanced Methods Workshops on Participatory Research Methods and Analysing Big Qual. I also contribute to PG courses, including Analysing Qualitative Data.

Research interests and projects

Bridging employability, family support and wellbeing: Building a future for all (2024-2025)- This project explored the innovative employability practices of Fife Gingerbread Family Approach, a service dedicated to supporting families from low-income areas in Fife. 

The Poverty Truth Community (2024-25) (PTC; formerly the first Poverty Truth Commission, launched in Scotland) is a movement for change led by people experiencing poverty. This work centres a collaboration between PTC, the Binks Hub, and the University of Edinburgh Library Service to support the co-production of a digital quilt resource to capture and communicate PTC’s legacy of work. 

‘Working across qualitative longitudinal studies: A feasibility study looking at care and intimacy’. The study examined the possibilities for developing new procedures and extending good practice for working across multiple sets of archived qualitative data. We wanted to know whether it is possible to do ‘big qual’ analysis while retaining all that is distinct about rigorous qualitative research. See here for the study outputs: https://bigqlr.ncrm.ac.uk/

A new page? Libraries, austerity and the shifting boundaries of civil society. Working with libraries, and the neighbourhoods in which they are based, this study explored the everyday social world of the public library, giving particular focus to those groups excluded, less able or disenfranchised from local processes of participation, and for whom the library might offer a source of ‘community’ or inclusion. 

Evaluating the Impact of Bookbug Session and Bags in Scotland. The aim of the study was to examine how, and to what extent, Bookbug impacts on the lives of families in Scotland, and on the knowledge, attitudes and practices of early years professionals. 

Move on Peer mentoring programme evaluation: this project involved an outcome-based evaluation of its pilot peer mentoring programme (which was funded by the Paul Hamlyn Foundation), and its relationship to its wider mentoring services.

Publications

A list of my publications is available here

Topics interested in supervising

I can act as a supervisor or in an informal mentoring role on projects concerning community life and everyday social interactions; civic society; youth transitions, class and inequality; youth work; public libraries; as well as students with interests in particular methodologies, including qualitative policy evaluation; qualitative data analysis; secondary qualitative data; and longitudinal qualitative methods.

PhD Students

Helen Berry (Social Policy): Exploring the meanings and value given to research co-production

Madison Bunker (Social Policy): We’re going through changes: Investigating how critical transitions in children’s lives affect children’s social and emotional development from the early years onwards [working title]

Emily Kenway (Social Policy): Vulnerability and exploitation in contemporary Britain 

Minkyung Kwon (School of Education) Gender Perspectives of South Korean Students in Designing Sex Education (completed 2024)

Joshua Anderson-Rose (International Development): Youth in Dzaleka Refugee Camp, Malawi: Young people’s views of waiting in a liminal place and liminal life stage. (completed, 2022) 

Works within

Staff Hours and Guidance

Currently by appointment

Publications by user content

Publication Research Explorer link
Davidson E. The power of youth work. Scottish Affairs. 2025 Sept 12.
Turner J, Lamb K, Saffrey Stuart E, Roesch-Marsh A, Davidson E, De Andrade M et al.. Poverty, precarity and community empowerment: Who decides? Binks Hub. 2025.
Davidson E, Berry H, McEwan J, Downie E. Come Away In (Our Living Room) 2025.
Davidson E, Calder A, Beever E, Ridley V. Beyond safe spaces: Youth work's role in shaping brave conversations on masculinities. Human Rights Education Review. 2025 Jun 9;1-14. Epub 2025 Jun 9. doi: 10.1080/25355406.2025.2513937
Davidson E. The Art of Slow Research: Why Taking Our Time Matters. 2025.
Davidson E, Berry H. Weaving Stories, Stitching Change: Creating a Digital Quilt with the Poverty Truth Community. 2025.
Bunker M, Skafida V, Davidson E. A matter of perspective? Differences between adolescent-parent and parent-teacher pairs in responses to the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire using a Scottish national cohort study. Survey Research Methods. 2025 Mar 14.
Davidson E. The Power of Youth Work: A Longitudinal Biographical Study. Youthlink Scotland, 2024.
Davidson E, Wright L, Roesch-Marsh A. The space before, the space beyond: Activism, relationships and social change in the neo-liberal academy. Children and Society. 2024 May;38(3):874-891. Epub 2024 Jan 30. doi: 10.1111/chso.12838
Wright LHV, Kustatscher M, Padilla K, Konstantoni K, Davidson E, Tisdall EKM. Rethinking child and youth activism in challenging times. Children & Society. 2024 May;38(3):729-743. Epub 2024 Mar 20. doi: 10.1111/chso.12837
Weller S, Davidson E, Edwards R, Jamieson L. Big Qual: A Guide to Breadth-and-Depth Analysis    . 1st ed. Palgrave Macmillan, 2023. 205 p. doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-36324-5
Lewthwaite S, Jamieson L, Davidson E, Edwards R, Nind M, Weller S. Enhancing the teaching of qualitative methods: Teaching the ‘breadth and depth' method for analysis of big qual. In Nind M, editor, Handbook of Teaching and Learning Social Research Methods. Edward Elgar Publishing. 2023. p. 67-84 doi: 10.4337/9781800884274.00014
Davidson E. Stepping Stones Mapping Report, 2023. 2023. 28 p.
Turner J, Roesch-Marsh A, Davidson E, De Andrade M, Bull R, Williams G. The Binks Hub launch exhibition 2022.
Davidson E, Cooper T. Bookbug: The mediating effect of book gifting in Scotland. In Hagen AM, editor, Reading Mediation: Relationships, Intervention, and Organization from the Eighteenth Century to the Present. Bethlehem: University of Lehigh Press. 2022. (Studies in Text & Print Culture).
Davidson E, Mcmellon C. A balanced approach to ethics in ethnography. In Spencer G, editor, Ethics and Integrity in Research with Children and Young People. Vol. 7. Emerald Group Publishing. 2021. p. 105-120. (Advances in Research Ethics and Integrity). doi: 10.1108/S2398-601820210000007012
Edwards R, Weller S, Davidson E, Jamieson L. Small stories of home moves: A gendered and generational breadth-and-depth investigation. Sociological Research Online. 2021 Sept 28. Epub 2021 Sept 28. doi: 10.1177/13607804211042033
Davidson E, Nugent B, Johnsen S. Charting the rough journey to ‘home’: The contribution of qualitative longitudinal research to understandings of homelessness in austerity. Social Policy and Society. 2021 Jul 27. Epub 2021 Jul 27. doi: 10.1017/S147474642100018X
Davidson E, (Guest ed.), Critchley A, (Guest ed.), Wright LHV, (Guest ed.). Adverse Childhood Experiences in Scotland: Critical reflections on policy and practice. Scottish Affairs. 2020 Nov;29(4).
Davidson E, Wright LHV. Realising children's rights in an ACE-aware nation. Scottish Affairs . 2020 Oct 31;29(4):538-555. Epub 2020 Oct 31. doi: 10.3366/scot.2020.0343
Davidson E, Wright L. Realising children’s rights in an ACE-aware nation. Scottish Affairs. 2020 Oct 30;29(4):538-555. doi: 10.3366/scot.2020.0343
Davidson E, Critchley-Morris A, Wright L. Making Scotland an ACE-aware nation. Scottish Affairs. 2020 Oct 30;29(4):451-455. doi: 10.3366/scot.2020.0336
Davidson E, (ed.), Critchley-Morris A, (ed.), Wright L, (ed.). Making Scotland an ACE-aware nation. Scottish Affairs. 2020 Oct 30.
Edwards R, Davidson E, Jamieson L, Weller S. Theory and the breadth-and-depth method of analysing large amounts of qualitative data: A research note. Quality and Quantity. 2020 Oct 19. Epub 2020 Oct 19. doi: 10.1007/s11135-020-01054-x
Davidson E, Critchley-Morris A, Wright LHV. Making Scotland an ACE-informed nation. Scottish Affairs. 2020 Oct 1;29(4):451-455. Epub 2020 Oct 1. doi: 10.3366/scot.2020.0336
Davidson E. A new page? The public library in austerity. In Rees J, Pomati M, Heins E, editors, Social Policy Review: Analysis and Debate in Social Policy, 2020. Vol. 32. Policy Press. 2020. (Social Policy Review).
Davidson E. Social justice or social control? An ethnographic study of detached youth work in Scotland. Scottish Affairs. 2020 May 1;29(2):254-276. doi: 10.3366/scot.2020.0318
Edwards R, Weller S, Jamieson L, Davidson E. Search strategies: Analytic searching across multiple datasets and within combined sources. In Qualitative Secondary Analysis. London: SAGE Publications. 2019. p. 79-100
Davidson E. Continuity and change: The voices of Scottish librarians. Scottish Affairs. 2019 Nov 1;28(4):395–413. doi: 10.3366/scot.2019.0295
Davidson E, Carlin E. ‘Steeling’ young people: Resilience and youth policy in Scotland. Social Policy and Society. 2019 Jul;18(3):479-489. Epub 2019 Apr 22. doi: 10.1017/S1474746419000095
Weller S, Edwards R, Jamieson L, Davidson E. Analysing large volumes of complex qualitative data: Reflections from a group of international experts. National Centre for Research Methods (NCRM). 2019 Apr 11, p. 1-67. (Working Paper (NCRM Working Paper)).
Davidson E, Edwards R, Jamieson L, Weller S. Big data, qualitative style: A breadth‑and‑depth method for working with large amounts of secondary qualitative data. Quality and Quantity. 2019 Jan 15;53(1):363–376. Epub 2018 Apr 26. doi: 10.1007/s11135-018-0757-y
Davidson E, McMellon C, Airey L, Berry H, Morton S. Evaluating the Impact of Bookbug Bags and Sessions in Scotland: Final Report. Edinburgh: Scottish Book Trust, 2017. 155 p.
Davidson E. Saying it like it is? Power, participation and research involving young people. Social Inclusion. 2017 Sept 26;5(3):228-239. doi: 10.17645/si.v5i3.967
Davidson E, Whittaker L. The marginalisation of care: Young care leavers’ experiences of professional relationships. In Blackman S, Rogers R, editors, Youth Marginality in Britain: Contemporary Studies of Austerity. Bristol: Policy Press. 2017. p. 191-206
Elsley S, Tisdall EKM, Davidson E. Children and Young People’s Experiences Of, and Views On, Issues Relating to the Implementation of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. Scottish Government, 2013.
Elsley S, Tisdall EKM, Davidson E. Children and young people’s views on child protection systems in Scotland. Scottish Government, 2013. (Social Research Series).
Davidson E. Between Edges and Margins: Exploring 'Ordinary' Young People's Experiences of the Everyday Antisocial. Sociological Research Online. 2013 Feb 28;18(1):5. doi: 10.5153/sro.2834
Davidson E. Second best? Raising the status of telephone interviewing in families and relationships research. In Jamieson L, Simpson R, Lewis R, editors, Researching Families and Relationships: Reflections on Process. 1 ed. London: Palgrave Macmillan. 2011
Davidson E, Pawson H. Radically Divergent? Homelessness Policy and Practice in Post-devolution Scotland. International Journal of Housing Policy. 2008 Jan 22;8(1):39-60. doi: 10.1080/14616710701817158
Davidson E, Pawson H. Fit for purpose? Official measures of homelessness in the era of the 'Activist State’, radical statistics. Radical Statistics. 2006;1.
Emma Davidson's Research Explorer profile