https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10584-020-02777-4

Unveiling assumptions through interdisciplinary scrutiny: Observations from
the German Priority Program on Climate Engineering (SPP 1689)
Judith Kreuter, Nils Matzner, […]Nadine Mengis
Climatic Change (2020)Cite this article

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Abstract
The interdisciplinary exchange in climate engineering research offers a
unique opportunity to make assumptions more explicit for such research
projects. While making assumptions explicit is the standard in all
disciplinary sciences, some assumptions in the context of societal
challenges can only be usefully unveiled, discussed, and verified from the
perspective of other research disciplines. Results from successful
interdisciplinary collaborations are then more accessible and more
generalizable to actors beyond the confines of the academic community. We
aim to illustrate how interdisciplinary exchange helps to unveil
assumptions in research endeavors and why this is important for successful
interdisciplinary collaborations. We therefore follow different stages of
the German Priority Program on Climate Engineering (SPP 1689), which we use
as an example case of a successful interdisciplinary project. SPP 1689
focused on risks, challenges, and opportunities of Climate Engineering from
the perspectives of numerous disciplines. Major results were that the
initial assessments of technologies had to be sobered, the consideration of
trade-offs is crucial for the potential assessment, and governance issues
appeared larger than previously considered. From the reflections of SPP
1689, we conclude with three lessons learned: (1) The project profited from
egalitarian organizational structures and communicative practices,
preventing the predominance from single disciplines. (2) Within the project
continuous efforts were undertaken to foster interdisciplinary
understanding. In addition, the flexible project structure allowed for the
accommodation of research needs arising as a result of these exchanges. (3)
SPP 1689 offered early career researchers a platform for professional
exchange on common challenges and best practices of being a part of an
interdisciplinary research project.

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