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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
Inter- and transdisciplinarity are increasingly relevant concepts and practices within
academia. While various definitions exist, a clear distinction between inter- and transdisciplinarity
remains difficult. Although there is a wide consensus about the need to
define and apply these approaches, there is no agreement over definitions. Building on
data collected during the first year of the COST Action TD1408 “Interdisciplinarity in
research programming and funding cycles” (INTREPID), this paper describes both
tensions and common ground about the characteristics and building blocks of interand
trans-disciplinarity. Drawing on empirical data from participatory workshops
involving INTREPID network members coming from 27 different countries, the paper
shows that diverse definitions of inter and trans-disciplinarity coexist within scientific
literature and in the mind of researchers and practitioners. The understanding about
the involvement of actors outside of academia also differs widely across scientific
communities irrespective of disciplinary training or the research subjects. The focus
should be on the knowledge that is required to deal with a specific problem, rather
than discussing “if” and “how” to integrate actors outside the academia, and
collaboration should start with joint problem framing. This diversity is, however, not an
absolute obstacle to practice, since the latter is made possible through building blocks
such as knowledge domains, problem- and solution- oriented approaches, common
goals, as well as target knowledge. In order to move towards more effective inter- and
transdisciplinary research, we identify the need for trained interdisciplinarity
facilitators and ‘accompanying research’ (derived from the Danish term
‘følgeforskning’). These two roles can be essential to inter- and transdisciplinarity
practices including the promotion of reflexivity.
Description
Keywords
Interdisciplinarity Transdisciplinarity
Pedagogical Context
Citation
Wehrden, H. v., Guimarães, M. H., Bina, O., Varanda, M., Lang, D. J., John, B., Gralla, F., Alexander, D., Lawrence, R. J., Raines, D. and White, A. (2017) Interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research: Finding the common ground of multi-faceted concepts, 3rd INTREPID Report, COST Action TD1408, 10 May, http://www.intrepid-cost.eu/intrepid-reports-and-policy-b
