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Lookup NU author(s): Professor Philip Lowe, Professor Jeremy Phillipson
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© 2015 Academy of Social Sciences. All rights reserved. It has become part of the mantra of contemporary science policy that the resolution of besetting problems calls for the active engagement of a wide range of sciences. The paper reviews some of the key challenges for those striving for a more impactful social science by engaging strategically with natural scientists. It argues that effective engagement depends upon overcoming basic assumptions that have structured past interactions: particularly, the casting of social science in an end-of-pipe role in relation to scientific and technological developments. These structurings arise from epistemological assumptions about the underlying permanence of the natural world and the role of science in uncovering its fundamental order and properties. While the impermanence of the social world has always put the social sciences on shakier foundations, twenty-first century concerns about the instability of the natural world pose different epistemological assumptions that summon a more equal, immediate and intense interaction between field and intervention oriented social and natural scientists. The paper examines a major research programme that has exemplified these alternative epistemological assumptions. Drawing on a survey of researchers and other sources it seeks to draw out the lessons for social/natural science cross-disciplinary engagement.
Author(s): Lowe P, Phillipson J, Wilkinson K
Publication type: Book Chapter
Publication status: Published
Book Title: Knowledge Mobilisation and the Social Sciences: Research Impact and Engagement
Year: 2014
Pages: 41-56
Print publication date: 17/03/2016
Acceptance date: 01/01/1900
Publisher: Taylor and Francis Inc.
Library holdings: Search Newcastle University Library for this item
ISBN: 9781317615316