Paradigmatic approaches to studying environment and human health: (Forgotten) implications for interdisciplinary research

► We examine the pragmatics of working in a truly interdisciplinary group. ► We reflect on the philosophical assumptions that underpin different research paradigms. ► Recognising different paradigmatic approaches facilitates smoother transition to mutual understanding. ► Interdisciplinary work shoul...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environmental science & policy 2013-01, Vol.25, p.218-228
Hauptverfasser: Phoenix, Cassandra, Osborne, Nicholas J., Redshaw, Clare, Moran, Rebecca, Stahl-Timmins, Will, Depledge, Michael H., Fleming, Lora E., Wheeler, Benedict W.
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container_end_page 228
container_issue
container_start_page 218
container_title Environmental science & policy
container_volume 25
creator Phoenix, Cassandra
Osborne, Nicholas J.
Redshaw, Clare
Moran, Rebecca
Stahl-Timmins, Will
Depledge, Michael H.
Fleming, Lora E.
Wheeler, Benedict W.
description ► We examine the pragmatics of working in a truly interdisciplinary group. ► We reflect on the philosophical assumptions that underpin different research paradigms. ► Recognising different paradigmatic approaches facilitates smoother transition to mutual understanding. ► Interdisciplinary work should work with rather than against different ways of seeing the world. Interdisciplinary research is increasingly promoted in a wide range of fields, especially so in the study of relationships between the environment and human health. However, many projects and research teams struggle to address exactly how researchers from a multitude of disciplinary and methodological backgrounds can best work together to maximize the value of this approach to research. In this paper, we briefly review the role of interdisciplinary research, and emphasise that it is not only our discipline and methods, but our research paradigms, that shape the way that we work. We summarise three key research paradigms – positivism, postpositivism and interpretivism – with an example of how each might approach a given environment-health research issue. In turn, we argue that understanding the paradigm from which each researcher operates is fundamental to enabling and optimizing the integration of research disciplines, now argued by many to be necessary for our understanding of the complexities of the interconnections between human health and our environment as well as their impacts in the policy arena. We recognise that a comprehensive interrogation of research approaches and philosophies would require far greater length than is available in a journal paper. However, our intention is to instigate debate, recognition, and appreciation of the different worlds inhabited by the multitude of researchers involved in this rapidly expanding field.
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subjects Animal, plant and microbial ecology
Applied ecology
Biological and medical sciences
Conservation, protection and management of environment and wildlife
Environment
environmental science
Epistemology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Generalizbility
human health
Interdisciplinary
interdisciplinary research
Interpretivism
issues and policy
Methodology
Ontology
Paradigms
Philosophy of science
Positivistism
Postpositivism
research projects
title Paradigmatic approaches to studying environment and human health: (Forgotten) implications for interdisciplinary research
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