Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperation

This article draws on social theory to advance conceptualization and methodology in transdisciplinary research. It starts with a short introduction to the state of debate on transdisciplinarity and its challenges and proposes adopting a procedural perspective on sustainability. It argues that sustai...

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Main Author: Stephan Lorenz
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022-01-01
Series:Current Research in Environmental Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666049022000603
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author Stephan Lorenz
author_facet Stephan Lorenz
author_sort Stephan Lorenz
collection DOAJ
description This article draws on social theory to advance conceptualization and methodology in transdisciplinary research. It starts with a short introduction to the state of debate on transdisciplinarity and its challenges and proposes adopting a procedural perspective on sustainability. It argues that sustainable development, understood as a learning process, is the subject matter for which transdisciplinary research provides the means. This is followed by sociological reflections on the main challenge of transdisciplinary research: the collaboration between scholars and non-academics. Such collaboration points to an ambivalence in conceptualizations of transdisciplinarity, as transdisciplinary research involves scientific activity while at the same time claiming to essentially be an activity beyond the sciences, namely, a joint activity of scientists and non-academics. This has led to several inconsistencies in the debates. Achieving greater consistency requires acknowledging the specific ‘scientific bias’ inherent in the concepts in the first place: the debate on transdisciplinary research is basically scientific self-reflection about the role of scholars in collaborative activities with non-academics. As a practical answer, professionalization is recommended. The subsequent section introduces a procedural approach to learning processes in transdisciplinary sustainability research. A general model of procedures promises conceptual progress by providing a methodological foundation for sustainable learning in science–practice cooperation as well as formal criteria for evaluating such learning. Finally, transdisciplinary research is defined as a specific kind of applied science.
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spelling doaj.art-0d231da466cb4fd3ae9245c0a1bbff132022-12-22T03:51:35ZengElsevierCurrent Research in Environmental Sustainability2666-04902022-01-014100182Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperationStephan Lorenz0Corresponding author at: Institute of Sociology, Carl Zeiss Str. 2, D-07743 Jena, Germany.This article draws on social theory to advance conceptualization and methodology in transdisciplinary research. It starts with a short introduction to the state of debate on transdisciplinarity and its challenges and proposes adopting a procedural perspective on sustainability. It argues that sustainable development, understood as a learning process, is the subject matter for which transdisciplinary research provides the means. This is followed by sociological reflections on the main challenge of transdisciplinary research: the collaboration between scholars and non-academics. Such collaboration points to an ambivalence in conceptualizations of transdisciplinarity, as transdisciplinary research involves scientific activity while at the same time claiming to essentially be an activity beyond the sciences, namely, a joint activity of scientists and non-academics. This has led to several inconsistencies in the debates. Achieving greater consistency requires acknowledging the specific ‘scientific bias’ inherent in the concepts in the first place: the debate on transdisciplinary research is basically scientific self-reflection about the role of scholars in collaborative activities with non-academics. As a practical answer, professionalization is recommended. The subsequent section introduces a procedural approach to learning processes in transdisciplinary sustainability research. A general model of procedures promises conceptual progress by providing a methodological foundation for sustainable learning in science–practice cooperation as well as formal criteria for evaluating such learning. Finally, transdisciplinary research is defined as a specific kind of applied science.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666049022000603Procedural methodologyProcedural sustainabilityScience–practice cooperationConception of transdisciplinarityProfessionalization
spellingShingle Stephan Lorenz
Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperation
Current Research in Environmental Sustainability
Procedural methodology
Procedural sustainability
Science–practice cooperation
Conception of transdisciplinarity
Professionalization
title Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperation
title_full Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperation
title_fullStr Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperation
title_full_unstemmed Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperation
title_short Transdisciplinary sustainability research. Procedural perspectives and professional cooperation
title_sort transdisciplinary sustainability research procedural perspectives and professional cooperation
topic Procedural methodology
Procedural sustainability
Science–practice cooperation
Conception of transdisciplinarity
Professionalization
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666049022000603
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