Beyond "linking knowledge and action": towards a practice-based approach to transdisciplinary sustainability interventions
Date
Authors
West, Simon
van Kerkhoff, Lorrae
Wagenaar, Hendrik
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
The imperative to “link knowledge and action” is widely invoked as a
defining characteristic of sustainability research. The complexities of
sustainability challenges such as climate change and biodiversity
loss mean that linear models of knowledge and action, where
knowledge is produced first (by researchers) then “applied to”
action (by policy actors), are considered insufficient. Researchers
have developed more dynamic, open-ended and collaborative
forms of policy engagement such as transdisciplinary and coproduction research. Although promising these approaches often
remain captive to linear assumptions that hinder their
transformative potential. We contribute by providing a relational
model of knowledge and action rooted in contemporary practice
theory. A practice-based approach suggests the primary task of
participants in transdisciplinary interventions is to find workable
solutions to situations of dynamic complexity that are
fundamentally indeterminate and unpredictable. Knowledge is not
“applied to” action, but drawn upon, produced and used from
within the situation at hand, allowing researchers and policy actors
alike to better harness the emergent character of situational
developments and outcomes. A practice-based approach provides
a conceptual language that captures the experienced complexities
of intervening for sustainability, reconfigures the nature of
“actionable knowledge,” and identifies appropriate modes of
evaluation for transdisciplinary and co-produced research.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Policy Studies
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License
Restricted until
Downloads
File
Description