Highlights
14• Empowerment is possible even when control is not fully ceded.
15• Engaging different stakeholders alone falls short of addressing power imbalances.
16• Transparently assuming positions should not be seen as hindrances, but as an asset.
17• "Strong objectivity" might generate less partial accounts of contested issues. proposed by transdisciplinarity, is to point to the fundamental aspect of reflexivity. But 25 reflexivity also includes being aware that power and control over the object is derived 26 from the social position of researchers, an issue not often explicitly discussed in 27 transdisciplinary research. Reflexivity thus represents an important but insufficient 28 principle for guaranteeing appropriate levels of self-reflection within a process of 29 knowledge coproduction. We therefore hypothesize that transdisciplinary research could 30 greatly benefit from feminist scientific tradition, in particular the insights of standpoint 31 theory and the concept of 'strong objectivity'. We analyse, and reflect upon, how a recent 32 transdisciplinary research initiative -conducted together with civil society organizations 33 in (CSOs) in six countries: Bangladesh, Bolivia, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Ecuador and India
34-has benefited from the use of 'strong objectivity'. We analyse how the social position 35 of all stakeholders, including ourselves as the scientific actors in this initiative, influence 36 the process and conditions of transdisciplinary knowledge co-production, and we discuss 37 how power and control by scientists affects the process and conditions of interaction.
38Thereby we argue for the necessity of explicitly assuming sides in contested contexts for 39 reaching objectivity in transdisciplinary research. -which lead to multiple and individual constellations of dominance and discrimination.
167The argument is that research starting off from marginal lives offers more enlightening background, which might be restricting or diverting the implementation of resource
Multi-stakeholder participation (MSP) has become a central feature in several institutions and processes of global governance. Those who promote them trust that these arrangements can advance the deliberative quality of international institutions, and thereby improve the democratic quality, legitimacy and effectiveness of both the institutional landscape, as well as decisions made within it. This paper employs a heuristic framework to analyze the deliberative quality of MSP. Specifically, it applies Dryzek's deliberative systems framework to the case of the Committee on World Food Security (CFS). The assessment shows that the CFS improves the deliberative quality of food security governance by including and facilitating the transmission of discourses from the public to the empowered spaces. However, the deliberative quality of CFS could be higher with stronger accountability mechanisms in place, more meta-deliberation and adoption of CFS outcomes at national and local levels. Reflecting on the limitations of using this heuristic framework to assess MSP, we conclude that the analysis would benefit from more explicit consideration of different forms of power that are part of the social relations between actors involved in such settings. By proposing this analytical approach, we expect to advance a heuristic framework for assessing deliberation in an international context of the growing importance of MSP in sustainability and global governance.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.