Abstract

Inter- and transdisciplinary collaboration is necessary in order to take on the environmental challenges facing humanity. Different disciplines, stakeholders, and policymakers need to work together to produce the knowledge necessary to create effective and just courses of action to counteract environmental problems. Recently, the notion of ‘boundary objects’ has been increasingly used within environmental studies to explain how some objects facilitate communication across the boundaries between different groups of actors. Due to their vague use in common contexts and specific use in each group, these objects let groups retain their own understanding while still communicating successfully with others. Novel concepts like ‘resilience’, ‘ecosystem services’, and ‘sustainability’ are due to their interpretive flexibility commonly described as boundary objects. However, in order to implement these concepts in concrete policy, some amount of standardization is needed. This presents a tension with the vagueness required for the facilitation of communication. This paper explicates whether and how novel concepts in environmental studies can be usefully understood as boundary objects. I review how boundary objects have been applied in the literature surrounding inter- and transdisciplinary collaborations, focusing especially on instances where concepts were considered to be boundary objects. I suggest that novel concepts in environmental studies can be understood as both ‘grand concepts’ in their most widespread use and as ‘hubs and spokes’ in local contexts. This allows for both vagueness at the macro level and standardization at the local level. I also explore how models, frameworks, and data have been successfully used as boundary objects.

Highlights

  • It has long been recognized that the challenges facing humanity in regard to our environment transcend the boundaries of traditional academic disciplines

  • A boundary object must be meaningful to all relevant social worlds, the meaning of that object will be somewhat different to every world it inhabits

  • Central aspects of hub-and-spoke concepts are the following: 1. Locality: “This paper presents an analysis of a research project conducted by a network of environmental research institutes called Partnership for European Environmental Research (PEER)” (Hauck et al 2014:376)

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Summary

Introduction

It has long been recognized that the challenges facing humanity in regard to our environment transcend the boundaries of traditional academic disciplines. Boundary objects are situated between social groups and are relevant to each group, and enable communication, mutual learning, and negotiation They are especially relevant when research is co-produced with stakeholders and policymakers (Bergmann and Jahn 2008; van Bruggen et al 2019; Hauck et al 2014). Boundary objects are involved in the production of interdisciplinary knowledge both between academic disciplines and with actors outside of academia. In their 1989 paper, Star and Griesemer coined the term ‘boundary object’ to describe “objects which both inhabit several intersecting social worlds [...] and satisfy the informational requirements of each of them” (Star and Griesemer 1989:393). The state of California was described by Star and Griesemer as a boundary object with coincident borders but different internal configuration

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