FURTHER READING
Arieli, D., Friedman, V. and Agbaria, K. (2009), ‘The paradox of participation in action research’, Action Research, 7(3): 263-290.
Barry, A. and Born, G. (eds.) (2015), Interdisciplinarity: Reconfigurations of the social and natural sciences, London: Routledge.
Barry, A. and Born, G. (2008), ‘Logics of Interdisciplinarity’, Economy & Society, 37(1): 20-49.
Bogner, A. (2012), ‘The Paradox of Participation Experiments’, Science, Technology and Human Values, 37(5): 506-527.
Born, G and Barry, A. (2010), ‘Art-science’, Journal of Cultural Economy, 3(1): 103-119.
Bruce, A., Lyall C., Tait, J. and Williams, R. (2004), ‘Interdisciplinary integration in Europe: the case of the Fifth Framework Programme’, Futures, 36: 457-470.
Buanes, A. and Jentoft, S. (2009), ‘Building Bridges: Institutional perspectives on interdisciplinarity’, Futures, 41: 446-454.
Carew, A.L. and Wickson, F. (2010), ‘The Trandisciplinary Wheel: A heuristic to shape, support and evaluate trandisciplinary research’, Futures, 42: 1146-1155.
Depres, C. and Lawrence, R.J. (2004), ‘Futures of Transdisciplinarity’, Futures, 36: 397-405.
Fortun, M. (2005), ‘For an ethics of promising, or: a few kind words about James Watson’, New Genetics & Society, 24(2): 157-174.
Jasanoff, S. (2014), ‘A mirror for science’, Public Understanding of Science, 23(1): 21-26.
Jeffrey, P. (2003), ‘Smoothing the Waters: Observations or the process of cross-disciplinary research collaboration’, Social Studies of Science, 33(4) 539-562.
Jensen, T.E. (2012), ‘Intervention by Invitation: New concerns and new version of the user in STS’, Science Studies, 25(1): 13-36.
Lane, S.N., Odeni, N., Landstrom, C., Whatmore, S.J., Ward, N. and Bradley, S. (2011), ‘Doing flood risk science differently: an experiment in radical scientific method’, Transactions of the Institute of British Geographers, 36(1): 15-36.
Lau, L. and Pasquini, M. (2008), ‘‘Jack of all trades’? The negotiation of interdisciplinarity within geography’, Geoforum, 39: 552-560.
Lewis, S.J. and Russell, A.J. (2011), ‘Being embedded: A way forward for ethnographic research, Ethnography, 12(3): 398-416.
Lyall, C. and Meagher, L.R. (2012), ‘A masterclass in interdisciplinarity: Research into practice in training the next generation of interdisciplinary researchers’, Futures, 44: 608-617.
Lyall, C., Meagher, L. and Brice, A. (2015) ‘A rose by any other name: Transdisciplinarity in the context of UK research policy, Futures, 65: 150-162.
Macnaughten, P., Kearnes, M.B. and Wynne, B. (2005), ‘Nanotechnology governance and public deliberation: What role for the social sciences?’, Science Communication, 27: 268-291.
Ospina, S., Dodge, J., Goodsoe, B., Miner, J., Reza, S. and Schall E. (2004), ‘From consent to mutual inquiry: Balancing democracy and authority in action research’, Action Research, 2: 47-69.
Pilnick, A. (2013) ‘Sociology without frontiers? Or the pleasures and perils of interdisciplinary research’, Sociological Research Online, 18(3).
Strathern, M. (1986), ‘The limits of auto-anthropology’, in A. Jackson (ed.), Anthropology at Home, London: Routledge.
Strathern, M. (2004), ‘Laudable aims and problematic consequences, or: The ‘flow’ of knowledge is not neutral’, Economy & Society, 33(4): 550-561.
Stokols, D. (2006), ‘Toward a science of transdisciplinary action research’, American Journal of Community Psychology, 38: 63-77.
Szerszynski, B. and Galarraga, M. (2013), ‘Geoengineering knowledge: Interdisciplinarity and the shaping of climate engineering research’, Environment and Planning A, 45: 2817-2824.
Thompson-Klein, J. (2014), ‘Discourses of Transdisciplinarity: Looking back to the future’, Futures: 68-74.
Walters, M. (2009), ‘Participatory Action Research’, in M. Walters (ed.), Social Research Methods, London: Falmer Press.
Whatmore, S. and Landstrom, C. (2011), ‘Flood apprentices: an exercise in making things public’, Economy & Society, 40(4): 582-610.