Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature

Sustainability science is a wide and integrative scientific field. It embraces both complementary and contradictory approaches and perspectives for dealing with newer sustainability challenges in the context of old and persistent social problems. In this article we suggest a combined approach called...

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Main Authors: Lennart Olsson, Anne Jerneck
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2018-10-01
Series:Ecology and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss3/art26/
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spelling doaj-22f484a17fbd4ab9a08e47b80dd663372020-11-25T01:19:07ZengResilience AllianceEcology and Society1708-30872018-10-012332610.5751/ES-10333-23032610333Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and natureLennart Olsson0Anne Jerneck1Lund University Centre for Sustainability Studies, LUCSUSLund University Centre for Sustainability Studies, LUCSUSSustainability science is a wide and integrative scientific field. It embraces both complementary and contradictory approaches and perspectives for dealing with newer sustainability challenges in the context of old and persistent social problems. In this article we suggest a combined approach called social fields and natural systems. It builds on field theory and systems thinking and can assist sustainability scientists and others in integrating the best available knowledge from the natural sciences with that from the social sciences. The approach is preferable, we argue, to the various scientific efforts to integrate theories and frameworks that are rooted in incompatible ontologies and epistemologies. In that respect, this article is a critique of approaches that take the integration of the social and natural sciences for granted. At the same time it is an attempt to build a promising alternative. The theoretical and methodological pluralism that we suggest here, holistic pluralism, is one way to overcome incommensurability between the natural and the social sciences while avoiding functionalism, technological and environmental determinism, and over-reliance on rational choice theory. In addition, it is a basis for generating better understandings and problem solving capacity for sustainability challenges. We make three contributions. First, we identify important reasons for the incommensurability between the social and natural sciences, and propose remedies for overcoming some of the difficulties in integrative research. Second, we show how sustainability science will benefit from drawing more deeply on - and thus more adequately incorporate - social science understandings of society and the social, including field theory. Third, we illustrate the suggested approach of social fields and natural systems in two examples that are highly relevant for both sustainability science and sustainability itself, one on climate change adaptation and one on geoengineering.http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss3/art26/knowledge integrationmethodologysocial theorysustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lennart Olsson
Anne Jerneck
spellingShingle Lennart Olsson
Anne Jerneck
Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature
Ecology and Society
knowledge integration
methodology
social theory
sustainability
author_facet Lennart Olsson
Anne Jerneck
author_sort Lennart Olsson
title Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature
title_short Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature
title_full Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature
title_fullStr Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature
title_full_unstemmed Social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature
title_sort social fields and natural systems: integrating knowledge about society and nature
publisher Resilience Alliance
series Ecology and Society
issn 1708-3087
publishDate 2018-10-01
description Sustainability science is a wide and integrative scientific field. It embraces both complementary and contradictory approaches and perspectives for dealing with newer sustainability challenges in the context of old and persistent social problems. In this article we suggest a combined approach called social fields and natural systems. It builds on field theory and systems thinking and can assist sustainability scientists and others in integrating the best available knowledge from the natural sciences with that from the social sciences. The approach is preferable, we argue, to the various scientific efforts to integrate theories and frameworks that are rooted in incompatible ontologies and epistemologies. In that respect, this article is a critique of approaches that take the integration of the social and natural sciences for granted. At the same time it is an attempt to build a promising alternative. The theoretical and methodological pluralism that we suggest here, holistic pluralism, is one way to overcome incommensurability between the natural and the social sciences while avoiding functionalism, technological and environmental determinism, and over-reliance on rational choice theory. In addition, it is a basis for generating better understandings and problem solving capacity for sustainability challenges. We make three contributions. First, we identify important reasons for the incommensurability between the social and natural sciences, and propose remedies for overcoming some of the difficulties in integrative research. Second, we show how sustainability science will benefit from drawing more deeply on - and thus more adequately incorporate - social science understandings of society and the social, including field theory. Third, we illustrate the suggested approach of social fields and natural systems in two examples that are highly relevant for both sustainability science and sustainability itself, one on climate change adaptation and one on geoengineering.
topic knowledge integration
methodology
social theory
sustainability
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol23/iss3/art26/
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