Abstract

Scholars in sustainability science as well as research funders increasingly recognize that a shift from disciplinary and interdisciplinary science to transdisciplinary (TD) research is required to address ever more complex sustainability challenges. Evidence shows that addressing real-world societal problems can be best achieved through collaborative research where diverse actors contribute different kinds of knowledge. While the potential benefits of TD research are widely recognized, its implementation remains a challenge. In this article, we develop a framework that supports reflection and co-learning. Our approach fosters monitoring of the collaboration processes, helps to assess the progress made and encourages continuous reflection and improvement of the research processes. The TD co-learning framework has four dimensions and 44 criteria. It is based on a substantial literature review and was tested in a Horizon 2020-funded research project ROBUST, which is applying experimental governance techniques to improve rural-urban relations in eleven European regions. The results demonstrate that the framework covers the key facets of TD collaboration and that all four broad dimensions matter. Each research-practice team reflected on how their collaboration is going and what needs to be improved. Indeed, the coordination team was able to see how well TD collaboration is functioning at a project level. We believe the framework will be valuable for actors involved in the planning and implementation of any type of multi-actor, interactive, innovation, transformation and action-oriented research project.

Highlights

  • The global challenges societies are facing are multidimensional, transcending disciplinary boundaries, multi-actor by nature and intertwined with a diverse and dynamic socio-political context [1,2,3,4,5]

  • We focus on TD collaboration as one of the key features of TD research

  • We checked whether the literature includes any of the following terms highly relevant for TD research (1) theoretical frameworks and concepts related to teamwork, collaboration,cognition, learning, mutual or collaborative learning, social learning, knowledge integration, social innovation or reflexivity or reflection; (2) theoretical or methodological discussions related to participatory, interdisciplinary, multidisciplinary, cross-disciplinary approaches, including monitoring of participatory processes, reflexive assessment, evaluation methods and living lab methodology

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Summary

Introduction

The global challenges societies are facing are multidimensional, transcending disciplinary boundaries, multi-actor by nature and intertwined with a diverse and dynamic socio-political context [1,2,3,4,5]. Sustainability science was established as a new field of research in the late 1990s to respond to the multidimensionality of challenges facing societies [4,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. It was designed as a problem-driven and solution-oriented field [4], with the aim to consolidate knowledge and methodologies among “natural sciences, social sciences and humanities to create a new, holistic science” [8] Many other researchers support these views, adding that academic and practitioner knowledge needs to be brought together [7,12,18,19,20,21]

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