Epistemic issues and practices of interdisciplinarity in policy-oriented research in Africa

Explore interdisciplinary challenges and practices in policy-driven research in Africa, focusing on the necessity of cross-knowledge dialogue to address complex socio-environmental issues.

Morocca, Côte d'Ivoire, Ethiopia

Axis: Epistemic communities & African agentivity

Coordinating investigators:

  • Jean-Noël Ferrié, LAM
  • Zineb Omary, UIR

Teams:

  • Les Afriques Dans Le Monde, Sciences Po Bordeaux, France
  • Centre For Global Studies, Université Internationale De Rabat, Morocco

Funder: IPORA internal

Status: accepted

Start date: December 1, 2023

Impact:

One doctoral fellowship is associated with the project:

  • Doctoral candidate: Rania Qarouach
  • Title: Epistemes at work: building an international interdisciplinary research network to inform public policies in Africa

General Assembly

Interdisciplinarity is a practical necessity of research in cases of complex aggregation. This is particularly true when adopting a public policy perspective. One of the defining characteristics of public policies is that they often combine different dimensions of the natural (or environmental) and the social worlds, making it impossible to analyse the situations they address—or to design mechanisms to mitigate or prevent their adverse effects—without mobilising multiple fields of knowledge. These fields must therefore necessarily engage in dialogue.

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Objectives

  1. To produce concrete analyses of interdisciplinarity as a set of practices articulating epistemic communities, and to understand the conditions under which such articulations are successful.
  2. To understand how these articulations produce an “object” (standardised characteristics, procedures, etc.) that can be appropriated by public actors—in other words, how they generate public policy prescriptions.
  3. To open the way for a praxeological analysis of how scientific statements are received by the public, an area too often limited to cognitivist approaches focused on biases and scientific illiteracy among ordinary members of society.
  4. To communicate with stakeholders about the mechanisms that enable effective interdisciplinarity and the articulation between scientific work and public policies, which cannot be reduced to mere implementation measures. This communication will aim to disseminate “good practices.”

Main methods

Several methods will be employed: ethnographic methods (observation of communities), preparatory interviews (to collect information on activities), semi-structured interviews (to position actors with respect to activities), and bibliometrics (necessary to assess interdisciplinary publications).

Our work is primarily grounded in an ethnomethodological approach linked to conversation analysis, for which the meaning of statements is inseparable from their contextualisation and their structuring into “turns of talk”—that is, the fact that they are necessarily addressed to individuals or collectives, present or represented, and interact with them. This dynamic can extend— as is the case here—beyond face-to-face conversational situations and verbal exchanges to encompass mediated and remote dialogues, such as “dialogical networks.” These networks…

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