A political ecology of transdisciplinary research

Transdisciplinary research (TDR) is widely regarded as a promising, and even essential, means of addressing complex sustainability problems, whilst delivering beneficial outcomes for scientists and the non-academic actors with whom they engage. Premised on the 'ecological modernisation' of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hali Healy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Arizona Libraries 2019-09-01
Series:Journal of Political Ecology
Online Access:https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23245
_version_ 1819296444181381120
author Hali Healy
author_facet Hali Healy
author_sort Hali Healy
collection DOAJ
description Transdisciplinary research (TDR) is widely regarded as a promising, and even essential, means of addressing complex sustainability problems, whilst delivering beneficial outcomes for scientists and the non-academic actors with whom they engage. Premised on the 'ecological modernisation' of Europe, regional funding for TDR under Framework Programmes such as FP7 and more recently Horizon 2020 have sought to support academic engagement with a wide range of research stakeholders through calls for transdisciplinary research  in order to better address Europe's "grand societal challenges" (EC 2013). This article, based on doctoral research, consists of an ex-post study of three European Union funded transdisciplinary projects (CREPE, EJOLT and GAP2) implemented under the Seventh Framework's (2007-2013) Science in Society program. Its focus is on how issues of power and governance permeate TDR projects, giving rise to tensions, challenges and ultimately struggles over the very meaning of official projects and their outcomes, despite the most egalitarian of intentions and underlying principles of mutual benefit. These tensions, this article argues, should be understood not merely as cultural, methodological or cognitive challenges, but as essentially political conflicts that manifest and flow across multiple scales. In light of these inherent challenges, the article argues that TDR is always conducted on a terrain of political ecology, and concludes by making recommendations for potential collaborators, as well as for European research policy makers, with the objective of enabling participants and funders alike to realise the transformative potential of this promising mode of research. Keywords: Political ecology of transdisciplinary research, power, governance, Science in Society, European research agenda, agro-ecology, environmental justice, fisheries
first_indexed 2024-12-24T04:58:12Z
format Article
id doaj.art-28a2372aa1844f439e3f9f13ea6fb393
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1073-0451
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-24T04:58:12Z
publishDate 2019-09-01
publisher University of Arizona Libraries
record_format Article
series Journal of Political Ecology
spelling doaj.art-28a2372aa1844f439e3f9f13ea6fb3932022-12-21T17:14:20ZengUniversity of Arizona LibrariesJournal of Political Ecology1073-04512019-09-0126150052810.2458/v26i1.2324522676A political ecology of transdisciplinary researchHali Healy0University of JohannesburgTransdisciplinary research (TDR) is widely regarded as a promising, and even essential, means of addressing complex sustainability problems, whilst delivering beneficial outcomes for scientists and the non-academic actors with whom they engage. Premised on the 'ecological modernisation' of Europe, regional funding for TDR under Framework Programmes such as FP7 and more recently Horizon 2020 have sought to support academic engagement with a wide range of research stakeholders through calls for transdisciplinary research  in order to better address Europe's "grand societal challenges" (EC 2013). This article, based on doctoral research, consists of an ex-post study of three European Union funded transdisciplinary projects (CREPE, EJOLT and GAP2) implemented under the Seventh Framework's (2007-2013) Science in Society program. Its focus is on how issues of power and governance permeate TDR projects, giving rise to tensions, challenges and ultimately struggles over the very meaning of official projects and their outcomes, despite the most egalitarian of intentions and underlying principles of mutual benefit. These tensions, this article argues, should be understood not merely as cultural, methodological or cognitive challenges, but as essentially political conflicts that manifest and flow across multiple scales. In light of these inherent challenges, the article argues that TDR is always conducted on a terrain of political ecology, and concludes by making recommendations for potential collaborators, as well as for European research policy makers, with the objective of enabling participants and funders alike to realise the transformative potential of this promising mode of research. Keywords: Political ecology of transdisciplinary research, power, governance, Science in Society, European research agenda, agro-ecology, environmental justice, fisherieshttps://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23245
spellingShingle Hali Healy
A political ecology of transdisciplinary research
Journal of Political Ecology
title A political ecology of transdisciplinary research
title_full A political ecology of transdisciplinary research
title_fullStr A political ecology of transdisciplinary research
title_full_unstemmed A political ecology of transdisciplinary research
title_short A political ecology of transdisciplinary research
title_sort political ecology of transdisciplinary research
url https://journals.uair.arizona.edu/index.php/JPE/article/view/23245
work_keys_str_mv AT halihealy apoliticalecologyoftransdisciplinaryresearch
AT halihealy politicalecologyoftransdisciplinaryresearch