Characteristics, emerging needs, and challenges of transdisciplinary sustainability science: experiences from the German Social-Ecological Research Program

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Characteristics, emerging needs, and challenges of transdisciplinary sustainability science: experiences from the German Social-Ecological Research Program. / Ruppert-Winkel, Chantal; Arlinghaus, Robert; Deppisch, Sonja et al.
In: Ecology and Society, Vol. 20, No. 3, 13, 09.2015.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Ruppert-Winkel, C, Arlinghaus, R, Deppisch, S, Eisenack, K, Gottschlich, D, Hirschl, B, Matzdorf, B, Mölders, T, Padmanabhan, M, Selbmann, K, Ziegler, R & Plieninger, T 2015, 'Characteristics, emerging needs, and challenges of transdisciplinary sustainability science: experiences from the German Social-Ecological Research Program', Ecology and Society, vol. 20, no. 3, 13. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-07739-200313

APA

Ruppert-Winkel, C., Arlinghaus, R., Deppisch, S., Eisenack, K., Gottschlich, D., Hirschl, B., Matzdorf, B., Mölders, T., Padmanabhan, M., Selbmann, K., Ziegler, R., & Plieninger, T. (2015). Characteristics, emerging needs, and challenges of transdisciplinary sustainability science: experiences from the German Social-Ecological Research Program. Ecology and Society, 20(3), Article 13. https://doi.org/10.5751/ES-07739-200313

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{82b44866e4084e36ac69e07d9e5b9a3c,
title = "Characteristics, emerging needs, and challenges of transdisciplinary sustainability science: experiences from the German Social-Ecological Research Program",
abstract = "Transdisciplinary sustainability science (TSS) is a prominent way of scientifically contributing to the solution of sustainability problems. Little is known, however, about the practice of scientists in TSS, especially those early in their career. Our objectives were to identify these practices and to outline the needs and challenges for early career scientists in TSS. To that end, we compiled 10 key characteristics of TSS based on a literature survey. We then analyzed research groups with 81 early career scientists against these characteristics. All of these research groups are funded by an ongoing federally funded German program for socialecological research whose main feature is to promote sustainability-oriented inter- and transdisciplinary research. We found that the practices of the 12 groups generally correspond with the characteristics for TSS, although there is ample variation in how they were addressed. Three major challenges were identified: (1) TSS demands openness to a plurality of research designs, theories, and methods, while also requiring shared, explicit, and recursive use of TSS characteristics; (2) researchers in TSS teams must make decisions about trade-offs between achievements of societal and scientific impact, acknowledging that focusing on the time-consuming former aspect is difficult to integrate into a scientific career path; and (3) although generalist researchers are increasingly becoming involved in such TSS research projects, supporting the integration of social, natural, and engineering sciences, specialized knowledge is also required.",
keywords = "Gender and Diversity, Early career scientists, Interdisciplinarity, Research practice, Self-evaluation, Social-ecological research, Sustainability science, Trandisciplinarity",
author = "Chantal Ruppert-Winkel and Robert Arlinghaus and Sonja Deppisch and Klaus Eisenack and Daniela Gottschlich and Bernd Hirschl and Bettina Matzdorf and Tanja M{\"o}lders and Martina Padmanabhan and Kirsten Selbmann and Rafael Ziegler and Tobias Plieninger",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2015 by the author(s).",
year = "2015",
month = sep,
doi = "10.5751/ES-07739-200313",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
journal = "Ecology and Society",
issn = "1708-3087",
publisher = "The Resilience Alliance",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Characteristics, emerging needs, and challenges of transdisciplinary sustainability science

T2 - experiences from the German Social-Ecological Research Program

AU - Ruppert-Winkel, Chantal

AU - Arlinghaus, Robert

AU - Deppisch, Sonja

AU - Eisenack, Klaus

AU - Gottschlich, Daniela

AU - Hirschl, Bernd

AU - Matzdorf, Bettina

AU - Mölders, Tanja

AU - Padmanabhan, Martina

AU - Selbmann, Kirsten

AU - Ziegler, Rafael

AU - Plieninger, Tobias

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2015 by the author(s).

PY - 2015/9

Y1 - 2015/9

N2 - Transdisciplinary sustainability science (TSS) is a prominent way of scientifically contributing to the solution of sustainability problems. Little is known, however, about the practice of scientists in TSS, especially those early in their career. Our objectives were to identify these practices and to outline the needs and challenges for early career scientists in TSS. To that end, we compiled 10 key characteristics of TSS based on a literature survey. We then analyzed research groups with 81 early career scientists against these characteristics. All of these research groups are funded by an ongoing federally funded German program for socialecological research whose main feature is to promote sustainability-oriented inter- and transdisciplinary research. We found that the practices of the 12 groups generally correspond with the characteristics for TSS, although there is ample variation in how they were addressed. Three major challenges were identified: (1) TSS demands openness to a plurality of research designs, theories, and methods, while also requiring shared, explicit, and recursive use of TSS characteristics; (2) researchers in TSS teams must make decisions about trade-offs between achievements of societal and scientific impact, acknowledging that focusing on the time-consuming former aspect is difficult to integrate into a scientific career path; and (3) although generalist researchers are increasingly becoming involved in such TSS research projects, supporting the integration of social, natural, and engineering sciences, specialized knowledge is also required.

AB - Transdisciplinary sustainability science (TSS) is a prominent way of scientifically contributing to the solution of sustainability problems. Little is known, however, about the practice of scientists in TSS, especially those early in their career. Our objectives were to identify these practices and to outline the needs and challenges for early career scientists in TSS. To that end, we compiled 10 key characteristics of TSS based on a literature survey. We then analyzed research groups with 81 early career scientists against these characteristics. All of these research groups are funded by an ongoing federally funded German program for socialecological research whose main feature is to promote sustainability-oriented inter- and transdisciplinary research. We found that the practices of the 12 groups generally correspond with the characteristics for TSS, although there is ample variation in how they were addressed. Three major challenges were identified: (1) TSS demands openness to a plurality of research designs, theories, and methods, while also requiring shared, explicit, and recursive use of TSS characteristics; (2) researchers in TSS teams must make decisions about trade-offs between achievements of societal and scientific impact, acknowledging that focusing on the time-consuming former aspect is difficult to integrate into a scientific career path; and (3) although generalist researchers are increasingly becoming involved in such TSS research projects, supporting the integration of social, natural, and engineering sciences, specialized knowledge is also required.

KW - Gender and Diversity

KW - Early career scientists

KW - Interdisciplinarity

KW - Research practice

KW - Self-evaluation

KW - Social-ecological research

KW - Sustainability science

KW - Trandisciplinarity

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84943165811&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.5751/ES-07739-200313

DO - 10.5751/ES-07739-200313

M3 - Journal articles

VL - 20

JO - Ecology and Society

JF - Ecology and Society

SN - 1708-3087

IS - 3

M1 - 13

ER -

DOI

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