Interdisciplinarity is the talk of the town. Funding agencies favour interdisciplinary research proposals, teaching programmes focus on developing interdisciplinary courses, and the publication of interdisciplinary studies has surged over recent decades. Lakshmi Balachandran Nair considers whether interdisciplinarity remains a strategy to surpass the limits of the methodological tools, theories, and views offered by a single discipline or has instead become something of an academic fad, leading to the further commodification of research, pseudo-interdisciplinarity, and a superficiality that may result in less rigorous, weak, thin science
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of research evaluation policies and ...
For what reasons do academics follow one another on Twitter? Robert Jäschke, Stephanie B. Linek and ...
The open science movement has been gathering force in STEM disciplines for many years, and some of i...
There is an increasing push from funders for researchers to undertake interdisciplinary projects. Bu...
The evaluation of interdisciplinary research is complicated by ambiguity about what interdisciplinar...
The academic impact of a scholar's research remains of great importance to institutions, particularl...
Outside of specific institutional and organizational settings discussions about ‘impact’ often desce...
This article focuses on epistemic challenges related to the democratisation of scientific knowledge ...
It is relatively rare for social scientists as individuals to break through into the mainstream medi...
Non-academics with extensive experience of particular sectors and industries can provide unique insi...
Academic research performance is typically assessed on the basis of scientific productivity. While t...
The impact of academic research, particularly on policy and the private sector, is an increasingly i...
Funding bids, blogs, academic papers, and policy briefs are awash with references to the "policymake...
The civil service represents a significant community of analysts and researchers, but their work can...
© 2019, © 2019 ASLE-UKI. This article is an exploration of the possibilities of interdisciplinary, i...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of research evaluation policies and ...
For what reasons do academics follow one another on Twitter? Robert Jäschke, Stephanie B. Linek and ...
The open science movement has been gathering force in STEM disciplines for many years, and some of i...
There is an increasing push from funders for researchers to undertake interdisciplinary projects. Bu...
The evaluation of interdisciplinary research is complicated by ambiguity about what interdisciplinar...
The academic impact of a scholar's research remains of great importance to institutions, particularl...
Outside of specific institutional and organizational settings discussions about ‘impact’ often desce...
This article focuses on epistemic challenges related to the democratisation of scientific knowledge ...
It is relatively rare for social scientists as individuals to break through into the mainstream medi...
Non-academics with extensive experience of particular sectors and industries can provide unique insi...
Academic research performance is typically assessed on the basis of scientific productivity. While t...
The impact of academic research, particularly on policy and the private sector, is an increasingly i...
Funding bids, blogs, academic papers, and policy briefs are awash with references to the "policymake...
The civil service represents a significant community of analysts and researchers, but their work can...
© 2019, © 2019 ASLE-UKI. This article is an exploration of the possibilities of interdisciplinary, i...
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the influence of research evaluation policies and ...
For what reasons do academics follow one another on Twitter? Robert Jäschke, Stephanie B. Linek and ...
The open science movement has been gathering force in STEM disciplines for many years, and some of i...