Affiliation:
1. School of Water Sciences, Cranfield University, UK,
Abstract
Although both research funders and knowledge users continue to call for more and higher-quality collaboration between researchers from different disciplines, there is little evidence available to inform the structure and management of cross-disciplinary research teams. A descriptive account of cross-disciplinary collaboration is presented based on a study of a cross-disciplinary team researching natural resource degradation issues. A number of tools are identified that characterize and support the collaboration process, including the use of story-lines and metaphor, choice of vocabulary, the nature of dialogue and the role of mediating agents. Four products of collaboration are also identified: ‘process’, ‘understanding’, ‘utility’ and ‘knowledge integration’. Conclusions focus on the implications for research programme design and the content of research training curricula.
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,General Social Sciences,History
Cited by
155 articles.
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