ABSTRACT

Arising out of human-environment interaction, sustainability problems resist disciplinary categories and simple solutions. This book offers a fresh approach to practical and methodological concerns in transdisciplinary environmental and sustainability studies. It illustrates methodological means by which researchers, professionals, and decision-makers can address complex environmental issues.

While scientific reasoning is mostly guided by disciplinary traditions, transdisciplinary research rests on other cognitive strategies. As it does not have a ready-made stance toward problems, figuring out what the puzzle is and what the answer might look like are crucial aspects of transdisciplinary inquiry. Through examples from environment and sustainability studies, the volume discusses heuristic schemes that can give structure to this exploration. By focusing on heuristics, rather than on methods, concepts, or general guidelines, the book argues that a problem-centered approach often resists the rigor of methodology. Learning from experience provides valuable “rules of thumb”, checklists, and other cognitive schemes for making ill-defined problems more tangible.

Written by an international team of authors, the chapters draw examples from dealing with issues in environmental protection, transport and climate policy, ecosystem services and disservices, environmental beliefs and attitudes, and more. Together with more theoretically oriented chapters, they show that the intellectual processes needed to tackle complex sustainability problems are as much about heuristic problem solving as they are about methodical work.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Sustainability, transdisciplinarity and the complexity of knowing

part I|79 pages

Heuristics and problem framing

chapter 2|27 pages

Thinking outward

Heuristics for systemic understanding of environmental problems

chapter 5|15 pages

Exploring the space of alternatives

Heuristics in sustainability scenarios

part II|74 pages

Heuristics and problem solving

chapter 6|16 pages

6 From complexity to solvability

The praxeology of transdisciplinary research

chapter 8|18 pages

8 Envisioning solutions

Expert deliberation on environmental futures

chapter 9|17 pages

Understanding environmental heuristics

Trust and dialogue

part III|35 pages

New directions for sustainability