Our strong track-record of delivering extensive regional impact and place-based transformation is underpinned by our meaningful engagement with a diverse range of partnerships and sectors. It is through those partnerships that we have been able to offer our knowledge, resources, and insights for the benefit of Kent and Medway.

We pledge to support our Partners by

Being Open and Accessible

  • ensuring our expertise, research and cutting-edge facilities benefit industry and the wider community
  • giving opportunities for all to participate in arts and cultural events, public lectures and exhibitions
  • listening to our partners to improve our work and encourage ideas exchange and knowledge sharing

Innovating to Grow 

  • offering business support, funding and networking opportunities, driving growth and productivity
  • transforming partnerships to unlock funding, attract investment and pursue a healthy future for the region
  • collaborating to ensure our research, resources and technology drive innovation and confront inequalities

Case studies

Over seventy five percent of small and medium enterprises (SMEs), employing 250 or less staff, struggle to compete with bigger organisations due to restricted budgets and lack of access to innovative technology, impacting both their growth and recruitment of new talent.

Delivered collaboratively with Screen South, Creative Folkestone and Maidstone Studios Ltd, the Hi3 Network, a research, development, and innovation project part-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) and valued at £12million, was the largest ERDF grant awarded in the South-East region. The project provided support from Canterbury Christ Church University to over 300 small and medium-sized enterprises in the creative industries during the project lifetime, connecting the university with businesses from across the South-East to offer access to:

  • innovative and immersive technology
  • academic expertise through consultancy
  • collaborative research opportunities
  • experimental studio space.

Following the Hi3 project completion, Canterbury Christ Church University has set up the Creative Innovation Hub (CIH) enabling organisations to continue to access innovative technology and expertise through research and development sprints and collaborative student industry projects.

 

The Kent and Medway region has some of the highest levels of health inequality in the UK and severe workforce challenges caused by shortages of both GPs and secondary care doctors, and the drain of aspiring doctors out of the region for medical training. In 2020, a partnership between Canterbury Christ Church University and the University of Kent, secured £30m+ in funding to establish Kent and Medway Medical School (KMMS), to tackle the challenges, poor health and life outcomes facing the region’s ageing, coastal and hard to reach communities.

In establishing this regional centre for medical education and research, KMMS will contribute to the ‘medical corridor’ envisaged by the Thames Estuary 2050 Growth Commission, with the first cohort of medical students due to graduate in September 2025.

  • Across the 5 years of their course, KMMS Students undertake a wide variety of placements across the region.  To facilitate this, KMMS is now working with 34 Primary Care Networks; 4 acute hospital trusts; the Kent and Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership Trust; 6 Urgent Treatment centres and 13 observational placement partners including Integrated Carer 24 (NHS 111 service deliverer); hospices and optometrists.
  • KMMS runs a Patient Engagement Programme, incorporating the patient and carer voice into the learning environment. This programme enables the community to help shape the training, assessment and selection of future doctors.
  • In 2023. KMMS appointed its first Directors of Research who have developed a diverse portfolio of global, national and regional research projects, bringing in extensive funding to the school.
  • In 2024. KMMS won substantial grants (£1.4m) from the National Institute of Health Research to launch an Integrated Academic Training Programme, introduce a research internship programme, and fund intercalated degrees for some students.  

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