1st Edition

Integrating Knowledge Through Interdisciplinary Research Problems of Theory and Practice

By Dominic Holland Copyright 2014
    256 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    256 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    In this important new text, Holland seeks to explain, by means of social scientific and philosophical inquiry, the difficulties that researchers often experience when attempting to integrate knowledge from different academic disciplines, either individually or as part of a team of subject specialists. It is argued that the difficulty of integrating knowledge from different academic disciplines is the result of, firstly, an inadequate justification of the nature of scientific integration and differentiation and, secondly, the dominance of disciplinary specialization in scientific inquiry.

    By focusing on both the theoretical justification for, and the practical feasibility of, integrating knowledge through interdisciplinary research, this book asks what properties of reality make the integration of knowledge from different academic disciplines possible and to what extent it is feasible to integrate knowledge through interdisciplinary research within a traditional, disciplinary context. Accordingly the text is both philosophical and social scientific in content: philosophical in the sense that it presents a theory of causal determination, which will help researchers to understand how reality is both differentiated and interconnected; social scientific in the sense that it presents the results of three case studies of collaborative interdisciplinary research projects.

    The book is heavily informed by the philosophy of critical realism. The philosophical argument about the possibility of integration and specialization in science draws explicitly on some of the key concepts of critical realism – particularly those comprising the theory of ‘integrative pluralism’ – while critical realist assumptions underpin the social scientific argument about the causal influence of the social system of knowledge production. By exploring researchers’ conceptions of knowledge and of reality on the one hand and their decisions about what sort of knowledge to produce on the other, Holland shows how the difficulty of scientific integration is both a problem of knowledge and a problem of knowledge production.

    This book is essential reading for students and academics interested in the emerging topic of knowledge integration and interdisciplinarity.

    1. Introduction: the problem of integrating knowledge  2. Critical realism and integrative interdisciplinary research  3. Towards a theory of knowledge production  4. The intellectual context of knowledge production  5. The social context of knowledge production  6. Conclusion: the possibility of integrative interdisciplinary research 

    Biography

    Dominic Holland holds a PhD from the Department of Politics at the University of Sheffield, where he has taught philosophy of social science, political analysis and social research methods.

    "this is an excellent book which will be enlightening for postgraduates interested in interdisciplinary research in political economy, although its central thesis is relevant to all of the social sciences. Of particular merit is Holland’s re-interpretation of the work of several key political economy thinkers in terms of critical realism. Holland also provides an interesting record of the struggles experienced by practitioners of interdisciplinarity — struggles that an engagement with critical realism would largely eradicate." — Leigh Price, Rhodes University, South Africa/ University College London