Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface. / Rasmussen, Kjeld; Arler, Finn.

In: Geografisk Tidsskrift, Vol. 110, No. 1, 2010, p. 37-45.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Rasmussen, K & Arler, F 2010, 'Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface', Geografisk Tidsskrift, vol. 110, no. 1, pp. 37-45.

APA

Rasmussen, K., & Arler, F. (2010). Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface. Geografisk Tidsskrift, 110(1), 37-45.

Vancouver

Rasmussen K, Arler F. Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface. Geografisk Tidsskrift. 2010;110(1):37-45.

Author

Rasmussen, Kjeld ; Arler, Finn. / Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface. In: Geografisk Tidsskrift. 2010 ; Vol. 110, No. 1. pp. 37-45.

Bibtex

@article{a61bd3deb22a4d69b4477f5640e58169,
title = "Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface",
abstract = "Current environmental problems increasingly call for research - as well as education - which crosses the traditional divides between well-established scientific disciplines and between natural science, technical sciences, social sciences and the humanities. This paper addresses the issue of what interdisciplinarity, at the interface between the natural and human sciences, entails and the theoretical problems and obstacles interdisciplinarity encounters. A number of attempts to institutionalize interdisciplinarity, at the Human-Environment interface, in 'fields of study' or even 'disciplines', are briefly discussed, including Geography, Human Ecology, Environmental Studies, Environmental Management, Ecological Economics, Sustainability Science and Earth System Science. Key problems of carrying out interdisciplinary research are identified, including differences of both ontological, epistemological and methodological nature. Particular attention is paid to differences between disciplines in the way they 'explain' and 'interpret' phenomena and regularities, and in 'world-views', pre-analytic assumptions and in time scales.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Geography, Interdisciplinarity",
author = "Kjeld Rasmussen and Finn Arler",
year = "2010",
language = "English",
volume = "110",
pages = "37--45",
journal = "Geografisk Tidsskrift",
issn = "0016-7223",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Interdisciplinarity at the Human-Environment Interface

AU - Rasmussen, Kjeld

AU - Arler, Finn

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - Current environmental problems increasingly call for research - as well as education - which crosses the traditional divides between well-established scientific disciplines and between natural science, technical sciences, social sciences and the humanities. This paper addresses the issue of what interdisciplinarity, at the interface between the natural and human sciences, entails and the theoretical problems and obstacles interdisciplinarity encounters. A number of attempts to institutionalize interdisciplinarity, at the Human-Environment interface, in 'fields of study' or even 'disciplines', are briefly discussed, including Geography, Human Ecology, Environmental Studies, Environmental Management, Ecological Economics, Sustainability Science and Earth System Science. Key problems of carrying out interdisciplinary research are identified, including differences of both ontological, epistemological and methodological nature. Particular attention is paid to differences between disciplines in the way they 'explain' and 'interpret' phenomena and regularities, and in 'world-views', pre-analytic assumptions and in time scales.

AB - Current environmental problems increasingly call for research - as well as education - which crosses the traditional divides between well-established scientific disciplines and between natural science, technical sciences, social sciences and the humanities. This paper addresses the issue of what interdisciplinarity, at the interface between the natural and human sciences, entails and the theoretical problems and obstacles interdisciplinarity encounters. A number of attempts to institutionalize interdisciplinarity, at the Human-Environment interface, in 'fields of study' or even 'disciplines', are briefly discussed, including Geography, Human Ecology, Environmental Studies, Environmental Management, Ecological Economics, Sustainability Science and Earth System Science. Key problems of carrying out interdisciplinary research are identified, including differences of both ontological, epistemological and methodological nature. Particular attention is paid to differences between disciplines in the way they 'explain' and 'interpret' phenomena and regularities, and in 'world-views', pre-analytic assumptions and in time scales.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Geography

KW - Interdisciplinarity

M3 - Journal article

VL - 110

SP - 37

EP - 45

JO - Geografisk Tidsskrift

JF - Geografisk Tidsskrift

SN - 0016-7223

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 32398463