| Literature DB >> 30147779 |
L Jamila Haider1, Jonas Hentati-Sundberg1, Matteo Giusti1, Julie Goodness1, Maike Hamann1,2, Vanessa A Masterson1, Megan Meacham1, Andrew Merrie1, Daniel Ospina1,3, Caroline Schill1,3, Hanna Sinare1.
Abstract
The establishment of interdisciplinary Master's and PhD programs in sustainability science is opening up an exciting arena filled with opportunities for early-career scholars to address pressing sustainability challenges. However, embarking upon an interdisciplinary endeavor as an early-career scholar poses a unique set of challenges: to develop an individual scientific identity and a strong and specific methodological skill-set, while at the same time gaining the ability to understand and communicate between different epistemologies. Here, we explore the challenges and opportunities that emerge from a new kind of interdisciplinary journey, which we describe as 'undisciplinary.' Undisciplinary describes (1) the space or condition of early-career researchers with early interdisciplinary backgrounds, (2) the process of the journey, and (3) the orientation which aids scholars to address the complex nature of today's sustainability challenges. The undisciplinary journey is an iterative and reflexive process of balancing methodological groundedness and epistemological agility to engage in rigorous sustainability science. The paper draws upon insights from a collective journey of broad discussion, reflection, and learning, including a survey on educational backgrounds of different generations of sustainability scholars, participatory forum theater, and a panel discussion at the Resilience 2014 conference (Montpellier, France). Based on the results from this diversity of methods, we suggest that there is now a new and distinct generation of sustainability scholars that start their careers with interdisciplinary training, as opposed to only engaging in interdisciplinary research once strong disciplinary foundations have been built. We further identify methodological groundedness and epistemological agility as guiding competencies to become capable sustainability scientists and discuss the implications of an undisciplinary journey in the current institutional context of universities and research centers. In this paper, we propose a simple framework to help early-career sustainability scholars and well-established scientists successfully navigate what can sometimes be an uncomfortable space in education and research, with the ultimate aim of producing and engaging in rigorous and impactful sustainability science.Entities:
Keywords: Education; Epistemological agility; Interdisciplinary; Methodological groundedness; Sustainability science; Undisciplinary
Year: 2017 PMID: 30147779 PMCID: PMC6086269 DOI: 10.1007/s11625-017-0445-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sustain Sci ISSN: 1862-4057 Impact factor: 6.367
Definitions of different types of mixed-disciplinary research
| Mixed discipline research | Definition |
|---|---|
| Multidisciplinarity | Multidisciplinarity is thematically organized rather than problem-oriented. Disciplinary boundaries are generally not crossed, but rather different disciplines are considered in parallel (Stock and Burton |
| Interdisciplinarity | Interdisciplinarity integrates perspectives, information, data, techniques, tools, concepts, and/or theories from two or more disciplines (Cronin |
| Transdisciplinarity | A process of collaboration between scholars and non-scholars on a specific real-world problem (Walter et al. |
| Undisciplinarity | Problem-based, integrative, interactive, emergent, reflexive science, which involves strong forms of collaboration and partnership (Robinson |
List of panelists in the panel discussion, their relevant experience, and the questions they were asked
| Panelist | Area of expertise | Questions asked |
|---|---|---|
| Joern Fischer, Leuphana University Lüneburg, Germany | Experience with interdisciplinary activities and research programs in the context of landscape sustainability. | We have heard that you are starting a new interdisciplinary research program and that you are in the process of recruiting new PhD students and Postdocs. What are the skills and competences you are looking for in that recruitment process? |
| Joan David Tàbara, Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain | Experience in sustainability knowledge integration and learning, as well as reframing of research, education and policy for sustainability. | What is your personal survival kit for working towards knowledge integration? |
| Tracy Van Holt, East Carolina University, USA | Holds an interdisciplinary degree, with extensive experience in interdisciplinary scientific methodologies used in sustainability science. | Regarding all the opportunities and challenges we face as interdisciplinary researchers, in your opinion, what are the kinds of competences we should develop? And how can we ‘market’ those better? |
| Frances Westley, University of Waterloo, Canada | Experience in interdisciplinary research collaboration as well as having led and designed novel curricula for interdisciplinary programs at the University of Waterloo. | Do you foresee any favorable changes in the near future regarding the institutional structure of universities, and research in general, becoming more favorable for interdisciplinary researchers to build a career? |
Fig. 1Results from survey exploring research backgrounds of Resilience 2014 conference participants. Number of respondents: before 1990: 32; 1990–1999: 32; 2000–2009: 56; 2010–2014: 93; after 2015: 111. The list of options for the online survey is found in Supplementary Material 2
Fig. 2Artistic rendition of the sustainability science PhD student (right) attempting to explain her ‘background’ to the more disciplinary ‘Nanotech science’ PhD student (left) who questioned her professional identity. Audience suggestions included: ‘don’t over share, explain your research question, and stand your ground with confidence.’ The video of the forum theater performance can be seen at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NveKDnImxS0 (Drawing by Johanna Yletyinen)
Fig. 3Undisciplinary compass. The relationship between two guiding competencies: epistemological agility and methodological groundedness (figure credit: Jerker Lokrantz/Azote)
Key quotes from panel discussion and coded themes to which they contribute
| Quote | Theme |
|---|---|
| TvH: ‘Show me your method, show what you can bring. And it doesn’t matter what discipline it comes from. That is an avenue for interdisciplinary collaboration.’ | Methodological grounding |
| FW: ‘So what is the survival kit? It is something I will call “epistemological agility” (…): basically understanding where thinking comes from. Within science and social science you have these multiple paradigms about what is truth, what is data, what is the role of the researcher. They are different from each other, but if you are trained to recognize that, it is like cracking codes. It means you know how to interface with whatever group you are looking at. (…) You start getting much more comfortable with [interdisciplinary research] once you start decoding in that way, and you come to situate yourself, and see the weaknesses in other perspectives, and your own as well. This makes you feel much more assured about interacting with multiple different types of disciplines and scientists.’ | Epistemological agility |
| FW: ‘In this highly interdisciplinary context we ought to train our graduate students with real good courses on research design and epistemology so that they have that capacity to crack codes. (…) It is the hidden superpower, (…) if you develop some sophistication there, it gives you a leg up in discussions, which I think it is a key interdisciplinary skill.’ | Navigating institutions and education |
TvH Tracy van Holt, JF Joern Fischer, FW Frances Westley, JDT Joan David Tàbara