Interdisciplinarity as academic accountability: Prospects for quality control across disciplinary boundaries

Katri Ilona Huutoniemi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Two major science policy issues are the integration of knowledge across academic disciplines and the accountability of science to society. Instead of adding new criteria for research evaluation, I argue, these goals can be achieved by subjecting disciplinary priorities and procedures to scrutiny from the rest of academia. From a social epistemological perspective, the paper discusses interdisciplinarity as a mode of intellectual accountability across disciplinary boundaries, which promises to make the academia more than the sum of its disciplinary parts. Drawing on discussions of interdisciplinarity and accountability in knowledge production, as well as on empirical findings of the evaluation of research proposals, the paper unpacks the notion of academic accountability into three dimensions – the recipients, contents, and practices of accountability – and illustrates the concrete difference interdisciplinarity makes in each dimension. The analysis shows that interdisciplinarity provides a context-specific mechanism of coordination, control and compromise between disciplinary regimes of knowledge. This framing of interdisciplinarity clarifies its role in the changing governance of science while simultaneously solving central controversies over its meaning in research evaluation.
Original languageEnglish
JournalSocial Epistemology : a journal of knowledge, culture and policy
Volume30
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)163-185
Number of pages23
ISSN0269-1728
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2016
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 5142 Social policy

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