TY - JOUR
T1 - Reflexivity and interdisciplinarity
T2 - the reflexive journey of an interdisciplinary research team in disaster risk reduction
AU - Forino, Giuseppe
AU - Barclay, Jenni
AU - Armijos, M. Teresa
AU - Phillips, Jeremy
AU - Córdova, Marco
AU - Sevilla, Elisa
AU - Filippi, Maria Evangelina
AU - Apgar, Marina
AU - Snijder, Mieke
AU - Andrade, S. Daniel
AU - Mejia, Adriana
AU - Bedoya, María Elena
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Purpose: Reflexivity supports research teams in developing and implementing interdisciplinarity perspectives, but there is still limited literature on this topic. To fill this gap, we explore how reflexivity can support a research team in its interdisciplinary efforts to create new knowledge for disaster risk reduction. Design/methodology/approach: We present the reflexive journey of our interdisciplinary research team consisting of Ecuador- and UK-based researchers from the social sciences, physical sciences and the arts and humanities and conducting multi-hazard research on Quito. By triangulating data obtained from different material collected during the reflexive journey, we discuss examples of how our team employed reflexivity towards interdisciplinarity. Findings: The reflexive journey allowed our interdisciplinary team to acknowledge and give value to its diversity; to discuss disciplinary language differences, and to gradually develop interdisciplinary working practices and conversations. The journey demonstrates how reflexive practices within research teams allow researchers to overcome disciplinary differences and promote interdisciplinarity to reach research outcomes. Originality/value: Our reflexive experience shows that adopting reflexivity can be effective in both enhancing interdisciplinarity and addressing the complex nature of risk.
AB - Purpose: Reflexivity supports research teams in developing and implementing interdisciplinarity perspectives, but there is still limited literature on this topic. To fill this gap, we explore how reflexivity can support a research team in its interdisciplinary efforts to create new knowledge for disaster risk reduction. Design/methodology/approach: We present the reflexive journey of our interdisciplinary research team consisting of Ecuador- and UK-based researchers from the social sciences, physical sciences and the arts and humanities and conducting multi-hazard research on Quito. By triangulating data obtained from different material collected during the reflexive journey, we discuss examples of how our team employed reflexivity towards interdisciplinarity. Findings: The reflexive journey allowed our interdisciplinary team to acknowledge and give value to its diversity; to discuss disciplinary language differences, and to gradually develop interdisciplinary working practices and conversations. The journey demonstrates how reflexive practices within research teams allow researchers to overcome disciplinary differences and promote interdisciplinarity to reach research outcomes. Originality/value: Our reflexive experience shows that adopting reflexivity can be effective in both enhancing interdisciplinarity and addressing the complex nature of risk.
KW - Disaster risk reduction
KW - Interdisciplinarity
KW - Reflexivity
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85204147933&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/DPM-09-2023-0222
DO - 10.1108/DPM-09-2023-0222
M3 - Artículo
AN - SCOPUS:85204147933
SN - 0965-3562
JO - Disaster Prevention and Management
JF - Disaster Prevention and Management
ER -