Meet the team

Professor David Best

Professor of Addiction Recovery at Leeds Trinity University


Doctor David Paton

Senior Lecturer in Criminology at University of Derby



Mulka Nisic

Project Manager at the University Derby

Ellie Johnson

Phd Student at the University Derby

Following on from a mixed methods European NIHR and ESRC funded project that explored drug recovery pathways, which also collected a diverse range of assets from those with lived experience of drug recovery about their experiences at different stages of the recovery journey. The collated assets included things, such as songs, paintings, poems, podcasts, blogs, short stories, graffiti art, drawings, ceramics etc. This innovative method proved to be successful in showcasing new forms of knowledge, and new or enriched ways of seeing and understanding drug recovery pathways and forms of recovery capital through the lens and range of creative assets submitted to the project.

There has been lots written about what works in recovery.  Yet, far too often the voices of those with this knowledge, those with lived experience of recovery, is not as always central to the dialogue.  The aim of the current project is to change this.  Therefore, this project supports people in recovery to create their own local recovery evidence base through Photovoice and creative writing.   This in turn will be collated to  develop of a recovery community website.

In order to achieve this, the research team worked with four Lived Experience Recovery Organisations: Recovery Connections, Project 6, The Well and Creative Start for this project.

The scope of the project was to recruit between 10 people in recovery from each of four Lived Experience Recovery Organisations to provide them with training in Photovoice and creative writing through workshops and seminars (online and F2F), with ongoing supervision and support, to allow them to evidence recovery innovation and success. The rationale for this approach was due to the need to change the traditional hierarchical research process from one whereby academics conduct the data collection, data analysis and dissemination, to one whereby those with the lived experience of drug addiction and drug recovery become the researchers.  This flips their role from research subject to knowledge creators and knowledge producers.

To date we have collected the photovoice and written entries from 11 different locations, Middlesbrough, Sunderland, Gateshead, Grimsby, Morecambe, Carlisle, Kendal, Barrow, Sheffield, Keighley, and Doncaster. Photographic entries and short-written descriptions of how the photograph demonstrates what has worked in their recovery journey.   This combination of photo voice and written entry provides both a lens through which to see their recovery journey but also a narrative understanding of their lens.

We hope that you will enjoy learning, just as we have, about the diverse range of factors that work in recovery from drug and/or alcohol addiction..