Moving Ahead: Environmental Sociology’s Contribution to Inter- and Transdisciplinary Research
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Chapter › peer-review
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Environmental Sociology : European Perspectives and Interdisciplinary Challenges. ed. / Matthias Gross; Harald Heinrichs. Dordrecht u.a.: Springer, 2010. p. 347-351.
Research output: Contributions to collected editions/works › Chapter › peer-review
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Moving Ahead: Environmental Sociology’s Contribution to Inter- and Transdisciplinary Research
AU - Groß, Matthias
AU - Heinrichs, Harald
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - This volume's goal is to further scholarship within the intellectual tradition of environmental sociology and its inter- and transdisciplinary connections. That it is time for sociology to generally move away from its purely internal debates has been pointed out by many sociologists in the last 4 decades, who have lamented the low impetus of sociology in public forums and policy issues and have uttered a general crisis of the discipline (see e.g., Gouldner 1970; Lemert 1995; Lopreato and Crippens 2001; Clawson et al. 2007). It is our contention that many of these critical assessments of the current state of sociology are also a crisis of sociology's potential for trans- or at least interdisciplinary collaboration. And indeed, it appears to be unclear as to what extend sociology is able to deliver relevant knowledge to the solution of pressing societal questions in cooperation with other disciplines. The editors of this volume believe that environmental sociology, unlike many other sociological subdisciplines, has taken up the challenge of interdisciplinarity since quite a while. In Europe, the term transdisciplinarity is most often used to describe integrative forms of research that comprise different methods for relating scientific knowledge and extra-scientific practice in problem-solving. In this way, the research topics of many streams of European environmental sociology are not mainly driven by self-referential disciplinary theory building, but they are inherently problem and solution-oriented and therefore necessarily inter- and also transdisciplinary.
AB - This volume's goal is to further scholarship within the intellectual tradition of environmental sociology and its inter- and transdisciplinary connections. That it is time for sociology to generally move away from its purely internal debates has been pointed out by many sociologists in the last 4 decades, who have lamented the low impetus of sociology in public forums and policy issues and have uttered a general crisis of the discipline (see e.g., Gouldner 1970; Lemert 1995; Lopreato and Crippens 2001; Clawson et al. 2007). It is our contention that many of these critical assessments of the current state of sociology are also a crisis of sociology's potential for trans- or at least interdisciplinary collaboration. And indeed, it appears to be unclear as to what extend sociology is able to deliver relevant knowledge to the solution of pressing societal questions in cooperation with other disciplines. The editors of this volume believe that environmental sociology, unlike many other sociological subdisciplines, has taken up the challenge of interdisciplinarity since quite a while. In Europe, the term transdisciplinarity is most often used to describe integrative forms of research that comprise different methods for relating scientific knowledge and extra-scientific practice in problem-solving. In this way, the research topics of many streams of European environmental sociology are not mainly driven by self-referential disciplinary theory building, but they are inherently problem and solution-oriented and therefore necessarily inter- and also transdisciplinary.
KW - Sustainability sciences, Communication
KW - Internal Debate
KW - Interdisciplinary Collaboration
KW - Governance Process
KW - Public Forum
KW - Intellectual Tradition
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84891400948&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-90-481-8730-0_19
DO - 10.1007/978-90-481-8730-0_19
M3 - Chapter
SN - 978-90-481-8729-4
SP - 347
EP - 351
BT - Environmental Sociology
A2 - Gross, Matthias
A2 - Heinrichs, Harald
PB - Springer
CY - Dordrecht u.a.
ER -