Integration and Implementation Insights

Preparing interdisciplinary research teams for transdisciplinary co-production: A framework and diagnostic questions

By Emma Ligtermoet, Claudia Munera-Roldan, Cathy Robinson, Zaynel Sushil and Peat Leith.

authors_ligtermoet_munera-roldan_robinson_sushil_leith
1. Emma Ligtermoet; 2. Claudia Munera-Roldan; 3. Cathy Robinson; 4. Zaynel Sushil; 5. Peat Leith (biographies)

How can interdisciplinary teams rapidly and collectively diagnose and design effective engagement approaches as they prepare for engaged (transdisciplinary) research? How can they build bridges with non-researcher societal actors to understand differences in language, methodology and even fundamental philosophies about ways and means of understanding the world?

We have developed a framework with context as the central feature, as this shapes all aspects of collaborative work. Context is then used to centre exploration of interconnected elements of positionality, purpose, power and process (4Ps).

Shared deliberation of the research context and the interconnected 4Ps requires an effective collective learning environment, which is upheld by the pillars of equity, trust, openness and inclusivity, and reflexivity.

The framework, which we call the “Context-centred 4 P’s Knowledge Co-production Framework” is illustrated in the figure below.

The framework elements, highly interconnected, but separated to help in operationalising critical co-production thinking, can be summarised as follows:

We took interdisciplinary sustainability science research teams through a variety of activities to test this framework and build reflexive capabilities as teams prepared for engagement work with non-researcher societal actors (ie., the transdisciplinary work). Additionally, we developed a set of diagnostic prompt questions, that can be used with the framework, to help teams prepare for co-production and potentially revisit with external collaborators.

Context-centred 4 P’s knowledge co-production framework. The four Ps are positionality, purpose, power and process, situated within a collective learning environment underpinned by pillars of equity, trust, openness and inclusivity, and reflexivity. (Source: Ligtermoet et al., 2025.)

Diagnostic prompt questions

Context:

Positionality

Purpose

Power

Process

Concluding questions

Would this framework and questions support your interdisciplinary team in their preparation for transdisciplinary co-production? Is there an ideal time for you and your team to do this preparatory work? Is there an ideal time for revisiting the framework collectively with your societal actor collaborators?

To find out more:

Ligtermoet, E., Munera-Roldan, C., Robinson, C., Sushil, Z. and Leith, P. (2025). Preparing for knowledge co-production: A diagnostic approach to foster reflexivity for interdisciplinary research teams. Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 12, 257. (Online – open access) (DOI): https://doi.org/10.1057/s41599-024-04196-7. This paper provides relevant references.

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:

Emma Ligtermoet PhD is a human-environment geographer and postdoctoral research fellow at CSIRO’s Valuing Sustainability Future Science Platform. She is based in Perth, Australia. Her research applies knowledge co-production theory and practice to understand socio-ecological change and just governance in navigating transitions and adaptation.

Claudia Munera-Roldan PhD is an interdisciplinary postdoctoral research fellow at CSIRO’s Valuing Sustainability Future Science Platform, based in Canberra, Australia. Claudia works at the interface of science-policy-practice in environmental governance arrangements, co-production, and futures. She applies future-oriented approaches, exploring options towards strategic thinking and collective learning to navigate global changes, considering the linkages between local communities and private and public sector initiatives to find options towards sustainable futures.

Cathy Robinson PhD is the project lead at CSIRO for Valuing Local Provenance which focuses on how to support locally defined co-benefits into emerging sustainability markets. Based in Brisbane, Australia, her research as a social and sustainability scientist has been applied through a range of Indigenous-led initiatives that show how to accelerate innovation with ideas that empower Indigenous knowledge, on-country enterprises and communities.

Zaynel Sushil MSc is an impact entrepreneur and strategist at CSIRO, based in Brisbane, Australia. He has a track record of launching and scaling social enterprises and is currently working on CSIRO initiatives including the Ag2050 Caring for Country and the Agricultural Productions Systems Simulator.

Peat Leith PhD leads CSIRO’s Valuing Sustainability Future Science Platform and is project lead for the Sustainability Science Scaffolding Project. He is based in Canberra, Australia. His research background as a social scientist in natural resource management across marine and coastal zone management, and agriculture, has focussed on how science can effectively underpin sustainability outcomes.

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