2010
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph7062692
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Transdisciplinarity as an Inference Technique to Achieve a Better Understanding in the Health and Environmental Sciences

Abstract: The problems of the world are not categorised into disciplines. They are far more complex, a reality that the tradition of transdisciplinary research has recognised. When faced with questions in public health and sustainability, the traditional scientific paradigm often seems inadequate, and, at least in medicine, transdisciplinary research has not yet been fully appreciated or acknowledged. This lack of recognition may be partly caused by a lack of cooperation between disciplines and between science and socie… Show more

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Cited by 16 publications
(17 citation statements)
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References 61 publications
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“…A key characteristic of adaptive governance is iterative learning that enables humans to cope with uncertainty and change, thus enabling institutions that guide stakeholder collaboration (Folke et al 2005). This is in line with the social learning concept (Leeuwis and Pyburn 2002; Keen et al 2005; Axelsson et al 2013b), as well as with the concepts of inference towards the best explanation or best understanding (Harman 1965; Lipton 2004; Annerstedt 2010). Similarly, sustainability indicators and measurable variables need to be developed in collaboration with stakeholders and decision makers, and parameter values need to be defined as norms or performance targets.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 65%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A key characteristic of adaptive governance is iterative learning that enables humans to cope with uncertainty and change, thus enabling institutions that guide stakeholder collaboration (Folke et al 2005). This is in line with the social learning concept (Leeuwis and Pyburn 2002; Keen et al 2005; Axelsson et al 2013b), as well as with the concepts of inference towards the best explanation or best understanding (Harman 1965; Lipton 2004; Annerstedt 2010). Similarly, sustainability indicators and measurable variables need to be developed in collaboration with stakeholders and decision makers, and parameter values need to be defined as norms or performance targets.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 65%
“…Rather, these will evolve throughout the continuous work and collaboration between researchers from different scientific disciplines, stakeholder participation, as well as communication and dissemination (e.g., Angelstam et al 2013a). Eventually, if successful, the process will result in joint problem–solution, across sciences, technology, and society (Galliers 2004; Annerstedt 2010). This results in a team approach to problem-solving research that aims for synergy from the phases of problem definition to solutions.…”
Section: Defining Transdisciplinary Researchmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have learned that collaboration is an evolving process, which starts from planning and writing the proposal and goes on to the next phases, in which relationship among team members evolve and strengthen over time, through formal and informal activities. The research progresses thanks to the integration of different perspectives, methods and experiences [52,53], and the team's commitment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Achieving consensus [110] is an important step in plant health management [8]. While plant disease risk can be assessed by using analytical techniques which consider spatial and temporal disease factors, Mills et al [8] indicate that this technical approach may not provide the best guidelines for policy formulation and decision-making.…”
Section: The Role Of a Cooperative Network In Plant Health Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%