Integration and Implementation Insights

Considerations for creating and funding new toolkits for inter- and transdisciplinary research

By Bethany Laursen, Bianca Vienni-Baptista, Gabriele Bammer, Antonietta Di Giulio, Theres Paulsen, Melissa Robson-Williams and Sibylle Studer.

authors-laursen_vienni-baptista_bammer_di-giulio_paulsen_robson-williams_studer
1. Bethany Laursen; 2. Bianca Vienni-Baptista; 3. Gabriele Bammer; 4. Antonietta Di Giulio; 5. Theres Paulsen; 6. Melissa Robson-Williams; 7. Sibylle Studer (biographies)

Are you thinking about creating a new toolkit for inter- and transdisciplinary research? What questions can help you consider whether to embark on such an effort? If you are a funder, how can you decide whether to support existing toolkits or fund new ones? And how can toolkits help your reviewers in considering funding applications?

We are the core members of the Toolkits and Methods Working Group hosted within the Global Alliance for Inter- and Transdisciplinarity (ITD Alliance). Since 2020, we have jointly mapped and visualized the previously uncharted landscape of inter- or transdisciplinary toolkits. Without attempting to be exhaustive, we identified 64 English-language toolkits relevant to inter- and transdisciplinarity, as well as others in German, Spanish, Dutch, and Japanese.

As curated collections of resources, toolkits provide methods, processes, concepts, heuristics, frameworks, and other assets for designing and implementing inter- and transdisciplinary research. However toolkits are now suffering from fragmentation, with multiple toolkits created by different communities without awareness of each other’s work.

In this i2Insights contribution we provide guiding questions to help the deliberations of those considering developing toolkits, as well as guiding questions for funders about supporting the development of toolkits and the use of toolkits in assessing grant proposals.

Guiding Questions for Toolkit Creators

If you are contemplating developing a new inter- and transdisciplinary toolkit, it is useful to consider the contributions your toolkit can make, issues related to quality, and various practicalities.

Questions about contributions to the inter- and transdisciplinary field include:

Questions about quality and quality control include:

Questions about the practicalities of curating a toolkit include:

Addressing the field-building and quality questions allows toolkit creators to place their work in a broader context. The questions on practicalities are a reminder that toolkits are not only intellectual endeavors, but also digital-material objects, subject to the constraints of time and (cyber)space. These practical questions might seem banal but in fact integrate the intellectual questions around goals that drive toolkit creation.

Guiding Questions for Toolkit Funders

From a funder perspective, toolkits have two key roles: (1) toolkits as research infrastructure, and (2) toolkits as reviewer resources.

Well-designed, up-to-date toolkits indicate the state of the art in inter- and transdisciplinary research practice and can therefore be considered as infrastructure for the research community as a whole, as well as for reviewers evaluating inter- and transdisciplinary research proposals.

In supporting research infrastructure, funders could have a role that goes beyond the development of new toolkits. They could also consider a role they rarely play: providing long-term financial support, communicating toolkit availability, and encouraging systematic use of existing toolkits.

In assessing funding for the development of new toolkits, the earlier questions for toolkit creators are also pertinent for funders. Additional questions for funders include:

In addition, funders could encourage their proposal reviewers to use toolkits for evaluating the quality of the tools that inter- and transdisciplinary projects propose to use.

Questions about toolkits as reviewer resources:

What do you think?

What’s your experience been in developing, using and/or funding toolkits, be they in inter- and transdisciplinarity or other areas? Are there other considerations that you would add to the questions above?

To find out more:

Laursen, B., Vienni-Baptista, B., Bammer, G., Di Giulio, A., Paulsen, T., Robson-Williams, M. and Studer, S. (2024). Toolkitting: An unrecognized form of expertise for overcoming fragmentation in inter- and transdisciplinarity. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 11: 857. (Online – open access) (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-03279-9.
Much of the wording of this i2Insights contribution has been taken verbatim from this paper.

More information about the ITD Alliance’s Toolkits and Methods Working Group can be found at: https://itd-alliance.org/working-groups/toolkits_methods/

Use of Generative Artificial Intelligence (AI) Statement: Generative artificial intelligence was not used in the development of this i2Insights contribution. (For i2Insights policy on generative artificial intelligence please see https://i2insights.org/contributing-to-i2insights/guidelines-for-authors/#artificial-intelligence).

Biographies:

Bethany Laursen PhD studies, develops, uses, and evaluates tools that help people make sense of wicked problems. She is a Team Science Specialist at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA and a member of the Toolbox Dialogue Initiative. Bethany coordinates the Toolkits & Methods Working Group for the Global Alliance for Inter- and Transdisciplinarity (ITD Alliance) and she maintains a consultancy called Laursen Evaluation & Design, LLC.

Bianca Vienni-Baptista PhD is Group Leader of ‘Cultural Studies of Science and Technology’ and Lecturer at the Transdisciplinarity Lab of the Department of Environmental Systems Science (USYS TdLab), ETH Zürich in Switzerland. Her research focuses on the study of inter- and transdisciplinary knowledge production processes. As a result, she is interested in methods and tools as well as concepts and theories as means of achieving transformative and developmental change. Together with her team, she investigates the specific conditions for transdisciplinary research and implements participatory co-production processes for sustainable development.

Gabriele Bammer PhD is Professor of Integration and Implementation Sciences (i2S) at the National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health at The Australian National University in Canberra. i2S provides theory and methods for tackling complex societal and environmental problems, especially for developing a more comprehensive understanding in order to generate fresh insights and ideas for action, supporting improved policy and practice responses by government, business and civil society, and effective interactions between disciplinary and stakeholder experts. She is the inaugural President of the Global Alliance for Inter- and Transdisciplinarity (2023-25).

Antonietta Di Giulio PhD is leader of the Research Group Inter-/Transdisciplinarity and senior researcher at the Social Transitions Research Group (STR) in the Department of Social Sciences and at the Program Man-Society-Environment (MGU), Department of Environmental Sciences, both at the University of Basel, Switzerland. Her areas of interest in inter-/transdisciplinarity are in theory of inter- and transdisciplinary research and teaching, methodology, knowledge integration and evaluation.

Theres Paulsen MSc is head of the Network for Transdisciplinary Research (td-net) of the Swiss Academies of Arts and Sciences and a member of the leadership board and Treasurer of the Global Alliance for Inter- and Transdisciplinarity (ITD-Alliance). She is located in Bern, Switzerland. She has expertise in knowledge exchange and transfer.

Melissa Robson-Williams PhD works at Manaaki Whenua Landcare Research in Lincoln, Aotearoa New Zealand as a senior researcher in environmental science and transdisciplinary research. She works in the Landscape, People and Governance team and manages the Integrated Land and Water Management research area. Her areas of interest are researching human environment relationships, managing the impacts of land use on water, science and policy interactions and the practice of integrative and transdisciplinary research.

Sibylle Studer PhD promotes co-production as head of the thematic knowledge & quality unit in an international cooperation organisation. The work described here was undertaken when she was head of Project Methods at the Network for Transdisciplinary Research (td-net) of the Swiss Academies of Arts and Sciences in Bern, Switzerland. She was responsible for the td-net toolbox and was co-initiator of the Global Alliance for Inter- and Transdisciplinarity Working Group on Toolkits and Methods. She is interested in collaborative modes of research and multi-stakeholder processes.

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