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E-raamat: Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Transitions to Sustainability

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  • Formaat: 268 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jun-2016
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781317007937
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  • Formaat: 268 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jun-2016
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9781317007937
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Demonstrating how a university can, in a very practical and pragmatic way, be re-envisioned through a transdisciplinary informed frame, this book shows how through an open and collegiate spirit of inquiry the most pressing and multifaceted issue of contemporary societal (un)sustainability can be addressed and understood in a way that transcends narrow disciplinary work. It also provides a practical exemplar of how far more meaningful deliberation, understandings and options for action in relation to contemporary sustainability-related crises can emerge than could otherwise be achieved. Indeed it helps demonstrate how only through a transdisciplinary ethos and approach can real progress be achieved. The fact that this can be done in parallel to (or perhaps underneath) the day-to-day business of the university serves to highlight how even micro seed initiatives can further the process of breaking down silos and reuniting C.P. Snow’s ‘two cultures’ after some four centuries of the relentless project of modernity. While much has been written and talked about with respect to both sustainability and transdisciplinarity, this book offers a pragmatic example which hopefully will signpost the ways others can, will and indeed must follow in our common quest for real progress.

List of figures
vii
List of tables
viii
Notes on contributors ix
Acknowledgements xiii
PART 1 Setting the scene
1(62)
1 Contexts of transdisciplinarity: drivers, discourses and process
3(18)
Gerard Mullally
Colin Sage
Edmond Byrne
2 Disciplines, perspectives and conversations
21(20)
Gerard Mullally
Edmond Byrne
Colin Sage
3 Sustainability as contingent balance between opposing though interdependent tendencies: a process approach to progress and evolution
41(22)
Edmond Byrne
PART 2 Transdisciplinary conversations and conceptions
63(156)
4 Paradigmatic transformation across the disciplines: snapshots of an emerging complexity informed approach to progress, evolution and sustainability
65(18)
Edmond Byrne
5 Fear and loading in the Anthropocene: narratives of apocalypse and salvation in the Irish media
83(23)
Gerard Mullally
6 Bio-fuelling the Hummer? Transdisciplinary thoughts on techno-optimism and innovation in the transition from unsustainability
106(18)
John Barry
7 The gulf between legal and scientific conceptions of ecological `integrity': the need for a shared understanding in regulatory policymaking
124(17)
Owen McIntyre
John O'Halloran
8 Precaution and prudence in sustainability: heuristic of fear and heuristic of love
141(17)
Benedicte Sage-Fuller
9 Sustainable future ecological communities: on the absence and continuity of sacred symbols, sublime objects and charismatic heroes
158(12)
Kieran Keohane
10 Using energy systems modelling to inform Ireland's low carbon future
170(16)
Brian O Gallachoir
Paul Deane
Alessandro Chiodi
11 Markets, productivism and the implications for Irish rural sustainable development
186(14)
Mary O'Shaughnessy
Colin Sage
12 Nanomaterials as an emerging category of environmental pollutants
200(19)
David Sheehan
PART 3 Conclusions
219(26)
13 Sustaining interdisciplinarity? Reflections on an inter-institutional exchange by an early stage researcher
221(12)
Stephan Maier
Michael Narodoslawsky
Gerard Mullally
14 In praise of intellectual promiscuity in the service of a `passion for sustainability'
233(4)
John Barry
15 Transdisciplinarity within the university: emergent possibilities, opportunities, challenges and constraints
237(8)
Edmond Byrne
Colin Sage
Gerard Mullally
Index 245
Dr Edmond Byrne is Senior Lecturer in Process & Chemical Engineering at University College Cork, Ireland.

Dr Gerard Mullally is Lecturer in the Department of Sociology at University College Cork, Ireland.

Dr Colin Sage is Senior Lecturer in Geography at University College Cork, Ireland.

All three are lead collaborators on the Sustainability in Society transdisciplinary research group at University College Cork, Ireland.