Abstract

The paper is presented against a background of many wicked problems that confront us in the world today such as violent crime, conflict that emanates from political power seeking, contests for scarce resources, the increasing reaction all over the world to the deterioration of socio-economic conditions and the devastation caused by natural disasters. This article will argue that the challenge of violent conflict requires an innovative approach to research and problem solving and proposes a research methodology that follows a transdisciplinary approach. The argument is informed by field research during 2006 on the management of knowledge in the Great Lakes region of Africa, including research on how knowledge on the 1994 genocide in Rwanda is managed. The paper will make recommendations on how transdisciplinary research is required to determine the causes of violent conflict in an African context and how practitioners and academics should engage in transdisciplinarity. It was found that trans- disciplinary research is required to gain better insight into the causes of violent conflict in an African context. It requires from the researcher to recognise the many levels of reality that has to be integrated towards a synthesis to reveal new insights into the causes of violent conflict, including recognising the existence of a normative-spiritual realm that informs the epistemology of Africa. It furthermore requires a methodology that allows us to break out of the stifling constraints of systems thinking and linear processes into the inner space at the juncture where disciplines meet (the diversity of African communities).Keywords: Africa, conflict, Rwanda, crime, genocide, violence, transdisciplinaryDisciplines: politics, education, law, epistemology, sociology, theology, management science

Highlights

  • Many wicked problems2 confront us in the world today

  • Wicked problems that come to mind are violent conflict that emanates from political power seeking, contests for scarce resources, the increasing reaction all over the world to the deterioration of socio

  • Trans-disciplinary research is required to determine the causes of violent conflict in an African context

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Summary

Introduction

Many wicked problems confront us in the world today. Wicked problems that come to mind are violent conflict that emanates from political power seeking (the protracted conflict in Libya), contests for scarce resources (the continued conflict in the Sudan), the increasing reaction all over the world to the deterioration of socio-. Dr Andreas Velthuizen is a senior researcher at the Institute for Dispute Resolution in Africa at the. A ‘Wicked problem’ is a problem that is difficult or impossible to solve because of incomplete, contradictory and changing requirements that are often difficult to recognize because of complex interdependencies that create other problems, if an effort is made to solve one aspect of a wicked problem. Td The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa, 8(1) July 2012, pp. Td The Journal for Transdisciplinary Research in Southern Africa, 8(1) July 2012, pp. 51 - 62

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