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  3. A typology of interdisciplinary collaborations: insights from agri-food transformation research.
 

A typology of interdisciplinary collaborations: insights from agri-food transformation research.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/91268
Publisher DOI
10.1007/s11625-025-01702-x
PubMed ID
40922901
Description
To understand complex societal transformations, scholars have called for more interdisciplinary research in which researchers from various disciplines collaborate. To support the implementation of such collaborations, we introduce a novel typology of interdisciplinary collaborations developed from the literature and from structured reflection on our own research experience. The typology distinguishes (I) common base, (II) common destination, and (III) sequential link type of interdisciplinary collaborations. Common base refers to an interdisciplinary collaboration at one research stage that later separates into parallel disciplinary work; common destination to a collaboration where separate disciplinary work feeds into joint interdisciplinary work at the next stage; and sequential link to a completed stage of disciplinary research that provides the basis for research in another discipline. We illustrate the typology with a case study of interdisciplinary collaborations in a research project that studied the potential for an evidence-based transformation of agricultural pesticide governance. The project involved researchers from seven natural, health, and social science disciplines who developed a process for forming and maintaining interdisciplinary collaborations. We provide five examples of interdisciplinary collaborations from the project, explaining for each its practical design and implementation, its contribution to overall research goals, and related opportunities and challenges. The examples show that the typology can systematize the thinking about interdisciplinary collaborations and enable critical reflection about interdisciplinary research design and implementation. Based on our reflections as early-career researchers, we conclude with lessons that can inform future interdisciplinary research projects on agri-food transformation and beyond.
Date of Publication
2025
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
300 Social sciences, sociology & anthropology > 320 Political science
Keyword(s)
Agriculture
•
Interdisciplinary research
•
Methods
•
Reflection
•
Research collaborations
•
Research design
•
Sustainability transformation
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Hofmann, Benjamin
Reber, Ueliorcid-logo
Institut für Politikwissenschaft (IPW) - Policy Analyse
Institute of Political Science
Department of Social Sciences
Ammann, Priska
Dötzer, Julia
Mark, Jennifer
McCallum, Chloe
Wiget, Milena
Institut für Politikwissenschaft (IPW) - Policy Analyse
Zachmann, Lucca
Additional Credits
Institut für Politikwissenschaft (IPW) - Policy Analyse
Series
Sustainability Science
Publisher
Springer
ISSN
1862-4057
1862-4065
Access(Rights)
open.access
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