These notes were developed by the Energy Geographies Research Group as part of a webinar in the 91ÇÑ×Ó Research Groups Professional Development and Mentoring Series, which took place on 24 June 2023. They draw on discussion in the webinar and comments from multiple colleagues.
Interdisciplinarity is often presented as something that academics should aspire to in the jobs we apply for, the articles we publish, and the grants we pursue. This is because emergent phenomena are never solely or inherently spatial/psychological/social/human/chemical/physical/etc., and in dividing our analysis of events into discrete disciplinary approaches and bodies of literature, we inevitably reduce the complexity of emergent phenomena and our understandings of them.
Yet, interdisciplinarity is not one thing. How you imagine it, and how someone else interprets it, will likely differ significantly in practice. Therefore, it is worthwhile thinking very carefully about what the objectives of working across disciplines should be, what the benefits of this mode of working are, and how, precisely, it might work in practice. It is essential to be able to communicate your answers to these questions clearly and show in no uncertain terms the value of interdisciplinary practice.
Truly interdisciplinary research takes a lot of time and effort. It requires careful reflection, discussion, and negotiation. You need to work out interdisciplinary vocabularies, create systems and spaces for communication, and you need to have a clear understanding of your overall aims, and the value of individual contributions. Interdisciplinarity is not something that should be taken lightly, or simply nodded towards in a tokenistic way.
The following is a list of advice on how to navigate interdisciplinarity from colleagues across human geography, developed through their experiences of interdisciplinary working. It was curated during an 91ÇÑ×Ó mentoring and professional development workshop in June 2023.