WFM 6209 Interdisciplinary Field Research Methodology in Water Management Research and Research...
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Transcript of WFM 6209 Interdisciplinary Field Research Methodology in Water Management Research and Research...
WFM 6209Interdisciplinary Field Research Methodology
in Water Management
Research and Research Methods in IWRM
Interdisciplinarity in Research
M. Shah Alam Khan
ProfessorInstitute of Water and Flood Management,Bangladesh University of Engineering and
Technology
• An examination of a subject from different points of view; creation of new knowledge; hunt for the truth; the way you educate yourself
• NOT just a trip to the library to pick up a stack of materials, or picking the first five hits from a your ‘GOOGLE’ search
• Fieldwork is not simply gathering ‘facts’. It is informed by a priori understanding of the processes to be studied
Research ?
Disciplines, Boundaries, Knowledge continuum`The world has problems, but universities have departments.’‘We are not students of some subject matter, but students of problems. And problems may cut right across the borders of any subject matter or discipline.’
Examples:How do ‘hartals’ affect us?How does the hydrological cycle affect and is affected by social processes?
Integrative Research
Integrative Concept: A definition of IWRM
IWRM is a process, involving all stakeholders in the watershed or basin, who together as a group, cooperatively work toward identifying the resource issues; developing and implementing a water resources management plan with solutions that are environmentally, socially and economically sustainable.
IWRM: Integration
• Different Uses of Water• Analytical Perspectives• Different Institutions responsible for water
management• Geographical Integration• Integration of water resource management into a
broader agenda of development
Disciplinary Studies
1. Within bounds of one academic discipline
2. Disciplinary goal setting3. No cooperation with other
disciplines4. Audience is the ‘club’ of kin
within the discipline5. Development of new
disciplinary knowledge and theory
Multidisciplinary Studies
1. Multiple academic disciplines
2. Goal setting under one thematic umbrella
3. Loose exchange of ideas
4. Research Process is parallel
5. Disciplinary theory development
6. No crossing of boundaries to create new theory/ knowledge
7. Only comparison of results
“Staple in” Individual Reports
Participatory Studies
1. Involve academic researchers and non academic participants
2. Working together to solve a common problem
3. Exchange of knowledge , but NOT to create new knowledge
4. May be disciplinary or multidisciplinary
5. Not necessarily research, goal may be academic or to
6. Solve a live problem in context
Levels of Stakeholders Participation
Interdisciplinary Studies
1. Crosses disciplinary boundaries
2. Common goal setting
3. Integration of disciplines
4. To solve a common goal
5. Focus is academic
6. Development of integrated knowledge and theory
Transdisciplinary Studies
1. Crosses disciplines and scientific/academic boundaries
2. Common goal setting
3. Integration of disciplines and non academic participants
4. Development of integrated knowledge and theory among science and society
Socio-technicalVs
Sociotechnical
Interdisciplinarity in an Individual.
End