KOSMOS CONFERENCE

 
'Bridging scales in human-environment research' survey

 

Research on and for the transformation towards sustainability requires interdisciplinary collaboration. When dealing with questions related to complex topics such as climate change impacts, global inequality, food insecurity and biodiversity loss, a wide range of methodological and theoretical perspectives are needed. Researchers working at different scales contribute different theories and methods, and generate diverse findings and insights. In order to fully address the complexity of the current sustainability challenges, there is a need to link and integrate knowledge produced at very different scales. Questions of ‘scale’ and ‘scaling’, therefore, present substantial challenges for interdisciplinary research and require researchers to consider novel ways of ‘bridging scales’.

The Postdoc and Young Researchers' Network (https://www.iri-thesys.org/education/postdoctoral_research/THESys%20Postdoc%20Network) based at the Integrative Research Institute for Transformation of Human-Environment Systems (IRI THESys) at the Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin has launched a survey in collaboration with KOSMOS conference on 'Bridging scales in interdisciplinary human-environment research'. The aim of this survey is to better understand the main challenges related to 'bridging scales' that researchers working in interdisciplinary human-environment research are facing, and to find the most suitable solutions and strategies for tackling those challenges. The survey contains 14 questions and will take approximately 10 minutes to complete. The results will be compiled and analysed to highlight research frontiers for bridging scales in interdisciplinary human-environment research.

We would greatly appreciate your participation in the survey:

https://hu.berlin/KOSMOS-survey

If you have any questions about the survey or the project, please contact Dr. Cecilie Friis (cecilie.friis@hu-berlin.de) or Dr. Matthias Baumann (matthias.baumann@hu-berlin.de).

Best wishes,
The THESys Postdoc and Young Researchers Network