Disciplinary knowledge production and interdisciplinary humanities

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiForskningfagfællebedømt

The chapter offers an introduction to this volume on frontier research in the humanities. It frames recent discussions on research governance, public value of research, and the heterogeneous nature of the humanities within the overall context of international research policy and initiatives to include the social sciences and humanities research in interdisciplinary collaboration. In European research and innovation initiatives, science, technology and innovation can no longer be seen in isolation from wider cultural, societal and ethical aspects. For instance, the shift to a green sustainable economy needs to include combined efforts in developing new technologies and at the same time creating new models of democracy, engagement, and sustainable behaviour, which draw on a range of interdisciplinary competences. Special challenges such as the role reserved for humanities and how to integrate epistemic cultures are identified. However, actual interdisciplinary collaboration often starts bottom-up, with researchers self-organizing to find collaborators outside their own speciality.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TitelMapping Frontier research in the Humanities
RedaktørerClaus Emmeche, David Budtz Pedersen, Frederik Stjernfelt
Antal sider14
UdgivelsesstedLondon & New York
ForlagBloomsbury Academic
Publikationsdato12 dec. 2016
Sider3-16
Kapitel1
ISBN (Trykt)978-1-4725-9768-7
ISBN (Elektronisk)978-1-4725-9769-4
StatusUdgivet - 12 dec. 2016

    Forskningsområder

  • Det Humanistiske Fakultet - Interdisciplinarity, Scientometrics, impact accessment, public values research, Philosophy of Science, History of Science, Knowledge production, academic field, styles of research, research policy, the humanities, research collaboration

ID: 168924674