Frontiers in Environmental Science (May 2022)

When to Use Transdisciplinary Approaches for Environmental Research

  • Milena Kiatkoski Kim,
  • Michael M. Douglas,
  • David Pannell,
  • Samantha A. Setterfield,
  • Rosemary Hill,
  • Sarah Laborde,
  • Laura Perrott,
  • Jorge G. Álvarez-Romero,
  • Leah Beesley,
  • Caroline Canham,
  • Anthea Brecknell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fenvs.2022.840569
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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Transdisciplinary research (TDR) can help generate solutions to environmental challenges and enhance the uptake of research outputs, thus contributing to advance sustainability in social-ecological systems. Our aim is to support investment decisions in TDR; more specifically, to help funders, researchers, and research users to decide when and why it is most likely to be worth investing in TDR approaches. To achieve our aim, we: 1) define TDR and use a decision tree comparing it with alternative modes of research (i.e., basic, applied, disciplinary, multi-disciplinary, and interdisciplinary research) to help researchers and funders distinguish TDR from other research modes; 2) identify features of the research problem and context (complexity, diverse knowledge systems, contestation, power imbalance, and disagreement on the need for transformative change) where a TDR approach could be more appropriate than the alternative research modes; and 3) explore the idea that the intensity of the contextual features in (2), together with the problem at hand, will help determine where a research project stands in a continuum from low- to high-TDR. We present five studies exemplifying lower- to higher-TDR approaches that are distinguished by: 1) the number and variety of research participants engaged; 2) the strength of involvement of non-academic actors; and 3) the number and variety of disciplines and knowledge systems involved in the research.

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