Navigating local relevance in transdisciplinary research: Exploring climate and environmental change in the Tasiilaq region, East Greenland

Sophie Elixhauser, Jorrit van der Schot

Veröffentlichungen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelPeer Reviewed

Abstract

Transdisciplinary research aims to produce knowledge relevant to scientists and non-academic stakeholders alike, a challenging task given the parties’ divergent epistemologies and the attendant time and resource constraints. In Tasiilaq, East Greenland, our group of climate scientists and anthropologists set out to study climate and environmental change and the impact on the local community of changes in precipitation from less snow to more rain. We describe how our project team tried to make the project relevant to our collaborators, and the tension that arose between scientific and local relevance, which proved difficult to resolve. Our experience also points to some fundamental frictions in transdisciplinary research and limitations of conventional project and funding schemes. We recommend that transdisciplinary projects should be co-created by all partners from the outset to ensure equal participation and to avoid the difficult, sometimes intractable task, of rebalancing scientific and local relevance at a later stage.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
FachzeitschriftAmbio. A Journal of Environment and Society
DOIs
PublikationsstatusVeröffentlicht - 2025

Fördermittel

This research was made possible by the kind cooperation of various people in Tasiilaq. Special thanks go to Jonna Klemensen and Ari Nielsen, the organisations SiuTsiu and SustainableNow, our interpreters and the Tasiilaq district administration for their support. We thank Anna Burdenski for her collaboration on the project and for proofreading of the draft manuscript. We would also like to acknowledge the comments of Wolfgang Sch\u00F6ner, Peter Schweitzer and Gertrude Saxinger's on drafts of this article, as well as the insightful comments and suggestions of two anonymous reviewers. We are grateful to the participants in the panel \"The aspect of time as a resource in co-creative work\" at the Anthropology Conference 2023 in Rovaniemi for the discussion that inspired parts of this paper. This work was supported by the Austrian Academy of Sciences (project Snow2Rain), the Austria's Agency for Education and Internationalisation OeAD Sparkling Science (project Snow2School), the ERC Advanced Grant Project InfraNorth (885646), the EU Horizon 2020 coordination project EU-PolarNet (101003766) and the University of Graz.

ÖFOS 2012

  • 504009 Ethnologie
  • 504017 Kulturanthropologie

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