ABSTRACT

From climate change to GM foods, we are increasingly confronted with complex, interconnected social and environmental problems that span disciplines, knowledge bases and value systems. This book offers a transdisciplinary, open approach for those working towards resolving these 'wicked' problems and highlights the crucial role of this 'transdisciplinary imagination' in addressing the shift to sustainable futures. Tackling Wicked Problems provides readers with a framework and practical examples that will guide the design and conduct of their own open-ended enquiries. In this approach, academic disciplines are combined with personal, local and strategic understanding and researchers are required to recognise multiple knowledge cultures, accept the inevitability of uncertainty, and clarify their own and others' ethical positions. The authors then comment on fifteen practical examples of how researchers have engaged with the opportunities and challenges of conducting transdisciplinary inquiries. The book gives those who are grappling with complex problems innovative methods of inquiry that will allow them to work collaboratively towards long-term solutions.

part |169 pages

The Practice

chapter |13 pages

‘Now I'm Not an Expert in Anything'

Challenges in Undertaking Transdisciplinary Inquiries Across the Social and Biophysical Sciences

chapter |9 pages

Global Inequalities in Research

A Transdisciplinary Exploration of Causes and Consequences

chapter |10 pages

Fences and Windows

Using Visual Methods to Explore Conflicts in Land and Seascape Management

chapter |9 pages

Calculating Community Risk

A Transdisciplinary Inquiry into Contemporary Understandings of Risk

chapter |11 pages

Embedded Scales

Interdisciplinary and Institutional Issues 1

chapter |11 pages

Adaptiveness and Openness in Ecosystem Management

An Exemplary Sensitivity

chapter |10 pages

Truth, Knowledge and Data

A Study of Truth-Building in Organizational Change

chapter |8 pages

Making Their Way

Releasing the Potential of Environmental Studies Graduates

chapter |8 pages

White Skin Black Masks

A Personal Narrative on Benevolent Racism