4.7 Article

Conceptualising global water challenges: A transdisciplinary approach for understanding different discourses in sustainable development

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Volume 298, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS LTD- ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2021.113361

Keywords

Transdisciplinary innovation; Sustainable development; Water; SDGs

Funding

  1. Global Challenges Research Fund (GCRF) UK Research and Innovation (SAFEWATER
  2. EPSRC Grant) [EP/P032427/1]
  3. EPSRC [EP/P032427/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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This study proposes a problem-language-context (PLC) model to frame sustainable development challenges, creating a heuristic for understanding challenges such as water security. Through a case study review of the United Nations World Water Development Reports (WWDRs) 2003-2019, it is suggested that this problem framing can reveal implicit assumptions held by policy makers, practitioners and researchers. A transdisciplinary approach is seen as a way to better understand conflicting viewpoints in discipline-based approaches to sustainable development, global water challenges and water security.
Global challenges impact upon substantial numbers of people in different locations and inform policy at multiple levels under the United Nation's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). An aspect of the SDGs framework is the stated inter-relationship between SDGs and local, regional and global partnerships for research and development. In response to dissatisfaction with existing approaches to addressing such complex problems the purpose of this paper is to propose a problem-language-context (PLC) model as a way of framing sustainable development challenges; and in so doing create a heuristic that allows challenges such as water security to be understood using a logically consistent framework. Such an approach builds on a growing transdisciplinary innovation literature that strives to generate knowledge that is problem-focused and inclusive of both scientific and societal stakeholders. The utility of the PLC model is then examined using a case study review carried out on a body of evidence - the United Nations World Water Development Reports (WWDRs) 2003-2019. The result of this review suggests that such problem framing can be of value in revealing the implicit (and sometimes contradictory) assumptions held by policy makers, practitioners and researchers. The main conclusion is that a transdisciplinary approach is one way of better understanding some of the conflicting viewpoints evident in discipline-based approaches to sustainable development, global water challenges and water security.

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