Abstract

Human influences on Earth's natural systems are accelerating, with anthropogenic climate and global change posing existential risks for mankind. To overcome the policy implementation gap in practice both collective and transformative actions for sustainability involving science, policy and society are urgently needed. In the realms of science, this relates to taking inter-and transdisciplinary research approaches to foster exchange and co-designing policy options between researcher, decision-makers and other societal stakeholders; however, such collaboration is often limited by time, funding and complexity constrains. This paper recognises that particularly early career climate change and sustainability researchers are exposed to both the claim for and practical challenges of inter- and transdisciplinarity . For a first qualitative investigation of Austrian early career researchers’ preparedness for conducting participatory research with societal stakeholders, this study examines perspectives of twelve early career researchers participating in a young scientists' workshop. Using a pre-post survey and analysing data by content, our findings indicate that workshop participants have to manage stakeholder processes directly after graduation and, due to a lack of methodological training, only use a small fraction of existing social science methods and participatory settings for stakeholder collaboration. To support other early career researchers and future students in Austria in developing strong inter-and transdisciplinary research skills, we highlight the added-value of integrating hands-on workshops with societal stakeholders, regular exchange of lessons learned and transdisciplinary lectures into university education. Offering more practice-oriented transdisciplinary learning activities during undergraduate education, like excursions and mini-projects in which students can develop and train participatory methods together with stakeholders under guidance, is believed to be a fruitful strategy in this context.

Highlights

  • In 2020, human interference with the Earth’s environmental Challenges to collaboration with stakeholders across a systems has reached a magnitude that is unprecedented spectrum from getting societal insights, preferences and in history [1], pushing the world into an alarming trajectory opinions all the way to longer-term involvement in experat the same time [2]

  • This paper set out to qualitatively examine twelve early ca- Going beyond the existing literature by assessing the reer climate change and sustainability researchers’ educational and practical experiences experiences, our results show that most workshop particiin conducting participatory research with stakeholders in the pants were knowledgeable about state-of-the-art methods context of Austria

  • This case study has provided in-depth insight into Austrian early career climate change and sustainability researchers’ educational and practical experiences when working with societal stakeholders in their inter- and transdisciplinary PhD or post-doc projects

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Summary

Introduction

In 2020, human interference with the Earth’s environmental Challenges to collaboration with stakeholders across a systems has reached a magnitude that is unprecedented spectrum from getting societal insights, preferences and in history [1], pushing the world into an alarming trajectory opinions all the way to longer-term involvement in experat the same time [2]. 3. What did they learn about stakeholder involvement during the workshop and what recommendations for Previous studies, undertaken in other geographical contexts improving inter-and transdisciplinary science educathan Austria, have investigated climate change and sustaintion at Austrian Universities were identified by workability researchers’ perspectives of and experiences with shop participants?

Results
Conclusion

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