
Positioning Research
Shifting Paradigms, Interdisciplinarity and Indigeneity
SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 9. April 2018
Book
Paperback/Softback
312 pages
978-93-5280-617-1 (ISBN)
Description
The availability of research methodologies and frameworks to facilitate different ways of gathering knowledge and performing research is often a matter of concern for early career researchers as well as advanced research scholars. Positioning Research, while identifying this gap, provides avenues that encompass differing cultural backgrounds and disciplines to enable exploration of research frameworks and shifting paradigms, considering the impact of social media and new forms of knowledge that assist real-time, global distribution of research.
The book highlights the possibilities of transition into 'the third space', where negotiation and dialogue are central to positioning research. It upholds the principle that different research methodologies are equally valid and valued in contributing to new knowledge. The book focuses on the contexts in which research questions are conceptualised and designed, and highlights the implications of research for the various partners and communities that participate in the research. It thus provides a cutting-edge framework for conducting multidisciplinary research.
The book highlights the possibilities of transition into 'the third space', where negotiation and dialogue are central to positioning research. It upholds the principle that different research methodologies are equally valid and valued in contributing to new knowledge. The book focuses on the contexts in which research questions are conceptualised and designed, and highlights the implications of research for the various partners and communities that participate in the research. It thus provides a cutting-edge framework for conducting multidisciplinary research.
Reviews / Votes
Contemporary Western quest for knowledge too often tends to eclipse traditional or indigenous knowledge preserved by societies over many thousands of years. The array of well-crafted chapters in this volume sets out, first, to examine the ramifications of this lacuna in the broader applied context of research pursued in higher degree education and in the works of early career academics, and second, to forge methodologies that better provide pathways for the transition to 'the third space', where research frameworks are explored and negotiated, overcoming the baggage of erstwhile approaches. The volume poignantly suggests constructive ways for engendering collaborative research, building effective research capacities and mentoring peer groups while conducting interdisciplinary research. -- Professor Purushottama Bilimoria * Honorary Professor, Deakin University; Senior Fellow, Melbourne University; and Visiting Professor, University of California * Positioning Research: Shifting Paradigms, Interdisciplinarity and Indigeneity makes a significant contribution to the global exchange of knowledge. The contributors to the book cover interdisciplinarity, as integral to: emerging research paradigms, the transition from a PhD student to an early career researcher, the relevance of indigenous knowledge to formal academic research, the roles of 'self' and 'language' in research, and new technologies and new frontiers of research. In Positioning Research, we are exposed to several 'lenses' of understanding, to different and unique ways of conceptualizing the world, to some decidedly non-Western ways of 'knowing' and to complementarities of knowledge systems. The integration of interdisciplinarity and indigenous knowledge within one body of work is truly unique. -- Professor Joe Graffam, * Pro Vice-Chancellor, Research Development and Training, Deakin University * As students and scholars interact in a globalized world, old disciplinary boundaries between academic disciplines of history and philosophy, sociology and anthropology, political science and economics seem more and more translucent, even porous. Few enquiries, if any, seem to fit neatly and squarely in one single academic box; increasingly, they require and demand the probing light of many perspectives and several angles. The present volume addresses some of these concerns boldly; by reaching out to another scholar across the national border, or across the historical period, or against the prevailing assumptions, it is daring to reformulate the research questions afresh. Such an attempt is sure to bear fruit and be creative and invigorating. -- Sehdev Kumar, * Professor Emeritus of Environmental Studies, University of Waterloo, Canada; Distinguished Professor of Culture & Communication, Himgiri Zee University, India, and Principal, Kumar Intern * Evolving cultural dynamics and research paradigms shift our thinking and doing through modes of different methodologies. This book investigates the ever-increasing premise of technological and cultural change, affirming that research in general is finding new ascribed value in various methodological approaches to the general knowledge economy. It is here that through the filter of a 'different' lens, existing ideological frameworks can be reconfigured and reconstituted to allow a valued dialogue across various cultural and academic divides. The contributors to this book provide varying positions to the premise of research itself, where there is a contribution to new knowledge through ancient knowledge and traditions. -- Brian Martin, * Honorary Professor of Eminence, Centurion University of Technology and Management, Odisha, India * This book tries to unravel the 'meanings' of and the 'relationship' between indigenous, traditional and contemporary knowledge and how they are engaged within research. Further, it explores the boundaries between disciplines and the difficulties researchers have in traversing them, although the need of the hour is to reformulate the research question from multiple lenses. The Cartesian dichotomy is an imposition on the multiple complementarities of the diverse, multilingual, multicultural world. This book will guide researchers from the dominant mono-model world to take a relook at their research paradigms to enable them to 'make sense of' the 'multiple realities' and 'complementarities' of the 'other'. -- Debi Prasanna Pattanayak, * World-renowned Indian Professor, Linguist, Social Scientist and Author, and Founder-Director, Central Institute of Indian Languages, Mysore, India * 'Positioning Research: Shifting Paradigms, Interdisciplinarity and Indigeneity makes a significant contribution to the global exchange of knowledge. The contributors to the book cover interdisciplinarity, as integral to: emerging research paradigms, the transition from a PhD student to an early career researcher, the relevance of indigenous knowledge to formal academic research, the roles of 'self' and 'language' in research, and new technologies and new frontiers of research. In Positioning Research, we are exposed to several 'lenses' of understanding, to different and unique ways of conceptualizing the world, to some decidedly non-Western ways of 'knowing' and to complementarities of knowledge systems. The integration of interdisciplinarity and indigenous knowledge within one body of work is truly unique.' -- Professor Joe Graffam,More details
Edition
First Edition
Language
English
Place of publication
New Delhi
India
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Weight
347 gr
ISBN-13
978-93-5280-617-1 (9789352806171)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Dr Margaret Kumar is Adjunct Professor at Centurion University of Technology and Management, Odisha, India. She has been appointed Senior Fellow (Honorary) at the University of Melbourne, Australia. Dr Kumar has worked at the University of Melbourne and Deakin University, Australia, in several faculties and at the Institute of Koorie Education, Deakin University, Victoria, Australia. Her forte lies in her multi-skilled qualities. She has a diversified experience of being an academic, an academic skills adviser, a Higher Degree by Research Language and Learning Advisor, Senior Lecturer in Teaching, Research and Research Support, Master of Education Co-ordinator, Strand Coordinator of International Education, Lecturer in Applied Linguistics and Lecturer in Language and Literacy Education. She has a deep cultural and educational awareness of the ethos of Indigenous societies and its diverse knowledge systems. This arises from her educational, cultural and social background. She has a high level of experience in interacting with cultures where protocol, hierarchical systems, customs, norms and values are integral parts of daily living, in facilitating communication within and among different educational, cultural and individual groups. She speaks several languages and has a Catholic, Hindu, Pacific and Western upbringing. Throughout her personal and professional development, she has lived with people from a number of cultures and diasporic communities. This coupled with experiential learning and teaching gives her an acute awareness of what is involved in capacity building for marginalized societies. To this end, she has a long track record of research and publications in areas such as: Indigeneity and Aboriginal cultures; new knowledge systems; cross-cultural understandings; cultures of learning; global literacies; internationalizing the curriculum and interdisciplinarity. She espouses knowledge that views pedagogy as a social practice and helps students learn within a holistic and comprehensive curriculum. She utilizes theoretical frameworks and methodologies to translate teaching and learning principles into practice. Her work in the area of cross-cultural and intercultural exchanges has been instrumental in supporting research students in bringing 'new' Knowledge Systems to the academy and the scholarship of learning. Dr Supriya Pattanayak is presently the Deputy Vice Chancellor at the Centurion University of Technology and Management (CUTM)-the first multi-sectoral, state-regulated private university in Odisha, India. While being primarily in an administrative role, she is also involved in teaching, research and consulting. She is also involved in an advisory capacity in the social enterprise initiatives of the University, Gram Tarang Employability and Training Services, Gram Tarang Inclusive Development Ltd, Gram Tarang Foods and the Urban Micro Business Center. She has published extensively in the field of social work and research methodology. Dr Pattanayak has also been appointed as Adjunct Professor at the Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) University, Melbourne, and is a Research Fellow at the St Petersburg State University, Russia. She has her qualifications from the Tata Institute of Social Sciences (MA) and the National Institute of Mental Health and Neuro Sciences (MPhil), India and RMIT University, Australia (PhD). She has an extensive teaching, research and policy experience, and her research interest is in the field of gender and development, education of indigenous people, sustainable livelihoods and social work pedagogy in different contexts. She has worked with non-governmental organizations (NGOs), multilateral and bilateral agencies, federal and state governments and universities in India and Australia. In her role as State Representative (Odisha), Department for International Development India (British High Commission), she worked collaboratively with various development partners in pursuance of harmonization of development efforts and achievement of Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Content
Foreword - Joseph Lo Bianco
Introduction: Positioning Research - Margaret Kumar and Supriya Pattanayak
Perspectives from Early Career Researchers
Originality, Hybridity and Intra-paradigm Shift - Margaret Kumar
Interdisciplinary Research and the Early Career Researcher - Graeme Pye
Art, the Academy and Strategy - Cameron Bishop
Early Career Researcher's Peer Support Group - Ndungi wa Mungai
Doing Research with 'Others': Experiences of Difference and Commonality - Niranjala (Nina) Weerakkody
Researching Is Relating Time and Space - Jacques Boulet
Indigenous and New Knowledge Systems
Metaphors We Live by: Appreciating the Place of Language in Indigenous Research - Supriya Pattanayak
Positioning Indigenous Knowledge - Mark Rose
New Frontiers of Research: Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Artistic Practice - Estelle Barrett
Aboriginal Spirituality and Its Relationship to the Positioning of Research - Terrence Kildea and Margaret Kumar
In-depth Methods for Portraying and Understanding Cultural Realities - Binod C. Agrawal
Theoretical Approaches and Case Study
Historicizing the Problematic Media Education - Chandrabhanu Pattanayak
The Use of Social Media and New Knowledge to Researchers in the New Age - M. J. Warren and S. Leitch
Developing Sustainable International Partnerships in Higher Education: A Case Study - Brenda Cherednichenko and Ian Robottom
Conclusion: Extrapolating Research - Margaret Kumar and Supriya Pattanayak
Index
Introduction: Positioning Research - Margaret Kumar and Supriya Pattanayak
Perspectives from Early Career Researchers
Originality, Hybridity and Intra-paradigm Shift - Margaret Kumar
Interdisciplinary Research and the Early Career Researcher - Graeme Pye
Art, the Academy and Strategy - Cameron Bishop
Early Career Researcher's Peer Support Group - Ndungi wa Mungai
Doing Research with 'Others': Experiences of Difference and Commonality - Niranjala (Nina) Weerakkody
Researching Is Relating Time and Space - Jacques Boulet
Indigenous and New Knowledge Systems
Metaphors We Live by: Appreciating the Place of Language in Indigenous Research - Supriya Pattanayak
Positioning Indigenous Knowledge - Mark Rose
New Frontiers of Research: Indigenous Knowledge Systems and Artistic Practice - Estelle Barrett
Aboriginal Spirituality and Its Relationship to the Positioning of Research - Terrence Kildea and Margaret Kumar
In-depth Methods for Portraying and Understanding Cultural Realities - Binod C. Agrawal
Theoretical Approaches and Case Study
Historicizing the Problematic Media Education - Chandrabhanu Pattanayak
The Use of Social Media and New Knowledge to Researchers in the New Age - M. J. Warren and S. Leitch
Developing Sustainable International Partnerships in Higher Education: A Case Study - Brenda Cherednichenko and Ian Robottom
Conclusion: Extrapolating Research - Margaret Kumar and Supriya Pattanayak
Index