Applications open for the Landscape Research Group’s 2026 Research Fund
1 April - 15 May 2026

The Research Fund supports innovative projects that deepen understanding of landscape and contribute to more equitable, sustainable relationships between people, place and environment.

Reimagining landscape change: Methods and Tools for a Transforming World

Landscapes are changing at an unprecedented pace and will continue to do so in the coming years due to a wide range of interacting drivers, including climate change, more-than-human relations, wars and displacement, economic pressures, rapid urbanisation, and depopulation. These processes are reshaping landscapes in complex and uneven ways, challenging how they are understood, represented, and governed. In this context, robust understanding is essential for effective action. Landscape researchers therefore have a critical role in developing new ways of seeing, analysing, and interpreting landscape change. It is increasingly important to continuously advance, test, and rethink the methods and tools through which landscapes are studied.

This year, the Research Fund invites proposals that develop interdisciplinary, innovative, and methodologically advanced approaches to understanding landscape change across scales, ranging from planetary systems to intimate, lived environments, encompassing humans, non-humans, and more-than-human relations in more equitable ways.

Areas of interest

The Research Fund will support proposals that develop or apply new methods, tools, and approaches in the following areas:

  • Historical, memory-based, and biographical methods: Approaches that use oral histories, archives, maps, Indigenous knowledge systems, collective memory, and other historical sources as structured methodological tools for interpreting long-term landscape change, including landscape biography approaches that integrate layered temporal understandings of place.
  • Computational, spatial, and visual methods for landscape change: Development and application of AI, geoAI, machine learning, computer vision, remote sensing, and large language models to analyse, simulate, and anticipate landscape change, combined with spatial analysis techniques and advanced visualisation methods such as participatory mapping, 3D modelling, immersive visualisation, and augmented/virtual reality tools.
  • Creative and arts-based research methods: Arts-informed methodologies (e.g. visual arts, performance, digital creativity) that enable new forms of understanding and communicating landscape change, including participatory and community-engaged approaches.
  • Language and knowledge systems as methodological tools: Approaches that use linguistic diversity and Indigenous knowledge systems as structured methods for interpreting landscape change and enabling cross-cultural and transboundary understanding.
  • Participatory and co-produced methods: Development of tools and frameworks for collaborative research with communities, stakeholders, and more-than-human perspectives, enabling shared interpretation and decision-making in contexts of rapid landscape change.
  • Ethical, reflexive, and decolonial research methodologies: Frameworks and tools that embed ethics into landscape research practice, including data sovereignty, Indigenous governance, consent, and more-than-human ethical considerations, alongside approaches that critically examine knowledge production and challenge dominant epistemologies to support more inclusive and plural understandings of landscape change.
  • International law and governance tools for landscape change: Methodological innovations that support legal and policy responses to spatial injustice, transboundary landscape change, and evolving planetary governance frameworks, including tools for analysing human and non-human rights and responsibilities.
  • Policy-to-practice methodological interfaces: Tools that translate landscape research into actionable policy and practice, improving the design, implementation, and evaluation of interventions addressing landscape change.

 

We invite researchers from diverse disciplines to contribute to this critical and evolving field, fostering deeper understanding of landscape change.

Funding available

A total of £15,000 is available for the 2026 Research Fund.

Applicants may request between £1,000 and £5,000.

Preference will be given to proposals that maximise the impact of LRG support through additional funding or in-kind contributions. The fund is not intended to support projects that already have significant external funding.

Who can apply

The Research Fund is open to projects addressing any aspect of landscape in line with LRG’s Research Strategy. We take a broad view of research and welcome proposals including research, development, knowledge exchange, dissemination and capacity-building.

There are no restrictions on discipline, sector or nationality. Applicants must be LRG members.

We particularly encourage applications from early-career researchers, independent researchers and arts-based practitioners, especially where proposals demonstrate collaboration, exchange and clear public benefit.

Key dates

For more information on this year’s theme, eligibility and available funding, download the full criteria using the button below.

How to apply

Completed applications should be submitted to the LRG Research & Policy Co-ordinator at the email address: research@landscaperesearch.org.

Application deadline – 15th May 2025

Days
Hours

Not yet a member?

Applicants must be LRG members before applying.

Useful Resources

Summaries of previous LRG-funded projects.

This recording is from a 2022 workshop led by Professors Karen Jones and Ian Mell, exploring the key characteristics of a successful funding application

In 2025, we hosted an LRG Research Showcase, featuring projects funded in both 2022 and 2023. To watch a recording this event, please click the image on the right.

The Landscape Research Group reserves the right to allocate funding across a range of projects and scales. Final decisions are made by the LRG Board.