Integration and Implementation Insights

Towards fair transdisciplinary collaborations that honour epistemic justice

By Annisa Triyanti, Barbara van Paassen, Corinne Lamain, Jessica Duncan, Jillian Student, Jonas Collen Ladeia Torrens and Nina de Roo

authors_triyanti_van-paassen_lamain_duncan_student_torrens_de-roo
1. Annisa Triyanti; 2. Barbara van Paassen; 3. Corinne Lamain; 4. Jessica Duncan; 5. Jillian Student; 6. Jonas Collen Ladeia Torrens; 7. Nina de Roo  (biographies)

What principles need to be upheld to fund and support fair, inclusive, and equitable transdisciplinary collaborations? What competences and attitudes are required for transdisciplinary collaborations to foster epistemic justice? And what do mushrooms have to do with this?!

It is widely acknowledged that to address complex societal problems and harness plural ways of knowing, a wider range of actors, perspectives and types of knowledge are needed than is traditionally the case in other forms of knowledge creation. Transdisciplinary collaborations are different from traditional forms of science in:

The latter merits particular attention, to avoid falling prey to epistemic injustice, by which we mean excluding relevant voices, or not including them in meaningful ways. This manifests as excluding people marginalized by dominant forces from 1) being heard and understood by others in interpersonal communications and 2) contributing to broader and deeper social understandings of the focal question or problem.

The mushroom life cycle as an analogy for transdisciplinary collaborations

We propose to speak of ‘transdisciplinary collaborations’ rather than ‘transdisciplinary research’ so as to de-centre the academic context. A nurturing metaphor, then, for thinking about transdisciplinary collaborations is the mushroom life cycle – shown in the figure below. This metaphor foregrounds the careful shaping of relationships, which paves the way for more fair, inclusive, and equitable collaborations.

The encounters at the beginning of a transdisciplinary collaboration (TD encounters in the figure) can be likened to the release of spores and the germination phase of the mushroom:

Transdisciplinary engagements are analogous to the expansion of the mycelium and formation of the primordium:

Transdisciplinary collaborations are like the development of the fruiting body:

Re-entering the cycle and the formation and release of new spores:

Finally, the environment is important for both mushrooms and transdisciplinary collaborations:

The mushroom life cycle as an analogy for fair, inclusive and equitable transdisciplinary (TD) collaborations. Source: van Paassen et al. (2023), with the mushroom life cycle taken from https://ommushrooms.com/pages/mycelium-vs-fruiting-body-m2.

Four principles that foster meaningful transdisciplinary collaborations

Understanding transdisciplinary collaborations along the metaphor of the mushroom life cycle offers opportunity for increasing their fairness, inclusivity and equity. This will nonetheless require specific attention throughout each stage of the life cycle. For this, we offer four principles:

  1. Address (context-specific) societally relevant issues while maintaining scientific relevance
    The tension between the shared goals and (possibly) distinct motivations of researchers and societal partners involved needs to be recognised in order to promote transdisciplinary collaborations. Alternatively, transdisciplinary collaborations can be considered a journey of finding mutual interest and relevance for both society and science, which might not be clear upfront.
  2. Embrace complexity, ambiguity, and uncertainty
    The wicked problems that transdisciplinary collaborations may address are characterised by unpredictable and non-linear dynamics and are often surrounded by conflicting knowledge claims and value frameworks. This requires a deliberate process of embracing dependencies and interconnectedness, disagreements about the validity of knowledge claims, as well as the high levels of uncertainty of the available knowledge for future events.
  3. Value and harness plural ways of knowing via co-creating and co-learning
    Transdisciplinary collaborations demand active engagement with different ways of knowing, values, and interests. As a result of the complexity and active engagement of different participants, no one way of doing or a universal optimal solution is self-evident. Co-creation, co-design, co-production, and co-learning evoke the direct involvement of societal actors to achieve integrative responses to societal challenges.
  4. Involve diverse relevant actors in inclusive, fair, and equitable ways
    We speak of relevant actors as those who are affected and/or have particular knowledge (whether academic or lived experience or other) on the issues being researched or addressed. Ideally, this group would include those “most affected and least heard” and from a diversity of backgrounds and perspectives.

These four principles are interconnected and not mutually exclusive. There may be some overlaps, especially in terms of the implications in practice.

Competences and attitudes

Training for transdisciplinary collaborations that provides alignment with these principles requires competences and attitudes that are not yet commonplace in academia, as well as unlearning some skills and attitudes that are widespread.

Training should emphasise attitudes that harness fair and just collaboration, eg., humility, tolerance of difference, empathy, awareness of power, openness and curiosity. This requires unlearning of attitudes that centralize the individual academic, that aim to showcase the ‘superior knowledge’ from a specific field or that is about pushing a specific perspective. To achieve this, strengthening key competences is vital, such as listening, reflecting, perspective-taking, integration of different types of knowledge, collaboration (including addressing barriers to participation), communication across sectors, adaptability, managing expectations and interests, risk assessment, and ‘managing’ conflicts.

For example, training requires exercises on positionality, power balance reflection and stakeholder mapping, and may be enhanced by embodied and creative approaches, as described in an earlier i2Insights contribution by two of us (Corinne Lamain and Jillian Student) on embodied and creative practices for creating connection in the context of conferences.

Reader reflections invited

What challenges have you experienced in trying to establish fair and just transdisciplinary collaborations? How do you take these principles into action in your practices? How do you reflect on, and train, skills and attitudes required for your transdisciplinary collaborations?

To find out more:

van Paassen, B., de Roo, N., Student, J., Torrens, J. and Triyanti, A. (2023). Scoping transdisciplinary collaborations: A principled approach to meaningfully fund and support unusual transdisciplinary encounters, engagements, and collaborations. Centre for Unusual Collaborations: Utrecht, Netherlands. (Online – open access): https://drive.google.com/file/d/14AFtnnOznj1aTNhu_egqB-1CU6zkQNAB/view (PDF 1.8MB)

The report cites Fricker, M. (2007). Epistemic injustice: Power and the ethics of knowing. Oxford University Press: Oxford, United Kingdom, which inspired our thinking.

Biographies:

Note: The authors are listed in alphabetical order by first name.

Annisa Triyanti PhD is Assistant Professor specializing in disaster and climate risk governance for sustainability at the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University, the Netherlands. She applies and explores transdisciplinarity in research and education and actively advocates for co-learning with diverse societal actors across various educational programs.

Barbara van Paassen MSc is an independent consultant and facilitator supporting organisations working for social, economic and environmental justice with research, strategy and outreach. She is passionate about bridging different worlds and co-creating inclusive spaces of learning, reflection, visioning and strategy development. She is also the host and creator of the People vs Inequality Podcast and a Senior Atlantic Fellow for Social and Economic Equity at the London School of Economics.

Corinne Lamain MSc is Director, Centre for Unusual Collaborations, the Netherlands. The Centre for Unusual Collaborations is part of an alliance between Technical University Eindhoven, Wageningen University and Research, Utrecht University and University Medical Center Utrecht, the Netherlands. She works on facilitating knowledge production that contributes to environmental justice, especially through transdisciplinary research. She is also a PhD candidate working on the militarization of climate action at the International Institute for Social Studies located in The Hague, the Netherlands.

Jessica Duncan PhD is Associate Professor in the Politics of Food Systems Transformation at the Rural Sociology Group, Wageningen University and Research in the Netherlands. She is a founding member of the Centre for Unusual Collaborations. Her research pioneers new ways of understanding and imagining food governance processes to support just and sustainable transformations.

Jillian Student PhD is a postdoctoral researcher on inter- and transdisciplinarity at Wageningen Institute for Environment and Climate Research, Wageningen University and Research, the Netherlands. Her research integrates different scientific disciplines, forms of knowledge and approaches to better understand emerging environmental changes that affect and are affected by human decision-making.

Jonas Torrens PhD is Assistant Professor at the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development, Utrecht University, the Netherlands, focusing on urban, policy and societal experimentation with sustainability and the policies that coordinate experimentation. He has co-coordinated the Transdisciplinary Field Guide, and is involved in teaching the Centre for Unusual Collaborations’ SPARK training on interdisciplinary competencies.

Nina de Roo PhD is a researcher on responsible transitions at Wageningen Economic Research (WUR), the Netherlands. Her research is centered around questions of inclusion/exclusion, collaboration, and knowledge politics in the domain of transitions in agriculture and food systems.

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