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      Process ownership in science–practice collaborations: the special role of transdisciplinary processes in sustainable transitioning

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      Sustainability Science
      Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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          Abstract

          The complexity and importance of environmental, societal, and other challenges require new forms of science and practice collaboration. We first describe the complementarity of method-driven, theory-based, and (to the extent possible) validated scientific knowledge in contrast to real-world, action-based, and contextualized experimental knowledge. We argue that a thorough integration of these two modes of knowing is necessary for developing ground-breaking innovations and transitions for sustainable development. To reorganize types of science–practice collaborations, we extend Stokes’s Pasteur’s quadrant with its dimensions for the relevance of (i) (generalized) fundamental knowledge and (ii) applications when introducing (iii) process ownership, i.e., who controls the science–practice collaboration process. Process ownership is a kind of umbrella variable which comprises leadership (with the inflexion point of equal footing or co-leadership) and mutuality (this is needed for knowledge integration and developing socially robust orientations) which are unique selling points of transdisciplinarity. The extreme positions of process ownership are applied research (science takes control) and consulting (practice takes process ownership). Ideal transdisciplinary processes include authentic co-definition, co-representation, co-design, and co-leadership of science and practice. We discuss and grade fifteen approaches on science–practice collaboration along the process ownership scale and reflect on the challenges to make transdisciplinarity real.

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          Most cited references108

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          Action Research and Minority Problems

          Kurt Lewin (1946)
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            Community-based participatory research contributions to intervention research: the intersection of science and practice to improve health equity.

            Community-based participatory research (CBPR) has emerged in the last decades as a transformative research paradigm that bridges the gap between science and practice through community engagement and social action to increase health equity. CBPR expands the potential for the translational sciences to develop, implement, and disseminate effective interventions across diverse communities through strategies to redress power imbalances; facilitate mutual benefit among community and academic partners; and promote reciprocal knowledge translation, incorporating community theories into the research. We identify the barriers and challenges within the intervention and implementation sciences, discuss how CBPR can address these challenges, provide an illustrative research example, and discuss next steps to advance the translational science of CBPR.
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              The current state of citizen science as a tool for ecological research and public engagement

                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Sustainability Science
                Sustain Sci
                Springer Science and Business Media LLC
                1862-4065
                1862-4057
                May 2023
                March 18 2023
                May 2023
                : 18
                : 3
                : 1501-1518
                Article
                10.1007/s11625-023-01291-7
                51f62c62-9dd9-4b5e-a2dc-efa168a8f347
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0

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