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Moving Health Upstream in Urban Development: Reflections on the Operationalization of a Transdisciplinary Case Study
Author(s) -
Black Daniel,
Scally Gabriel,
Orme Judy,
Hunt Alistair,
Pilkington Paul,
Lawrence Roderick,
Ebi Kristie
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
global challenges
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2056-6646
DOI - 10.1002/gch2.201700103
Subject(s) - operationalization , clarity , engineering ethics , conceptualization , upstream (networking) , acknowledgement , sociology , knowledge management , engineering , computer science , telecommunications , philosophy , chemistry , biochemistry , computer security , epistemology , artificial intelligence
Abstract This paper describes the development, conceptualization, and implementation of a transdisciplinary research pilot, the aim of which is to understand how human and planetary health could become a priority for those who control the urban development process. Key challenges include a significant dislocation between academia and the real world, alongside systemic failures in valuation and assessment mechanisms. The National Institutes of Health four‐phase model of transdisciplinary team‐based research is drawn on and adapted to reflect on what has worked well and what has not operationally. Results underscore the need for experienced academics open to new collaborations and ways of working; clarity of leadership without compromising exploration; clarification of the poorly understood “impacts interface” and navigation toward effective real world impact; acknowledgement of the additional time and resource required for transdisciplinary research and “nonacademic” researchers. Having practitioner‐researchers as part of the research leadership team requires rigourous reflective practice and effective management, but it can also ensure breadth in transdisciplinary outlook as well as constant course correction toward real‐world impact. It is important for the research community to understand better the opportunities and limitations provided by knowledge intermediaries in terms of function, specialism, and experience.

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