Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/61818
Title: Unity from Diversity: Pluralist Systemic Thinking for Social and Behavioural Research
Contributor(s): Cooksey, Ray W  (author)orcid 
Publication Date: 2024-07
DOI: 10.1007/978-981-97-3462-7
Handle Link: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/61818
Abstract: 

This book is about the choices that researchers can make when building knowledge in social and behavioural spaces. Knowledge is the unity we seek and, given that social and behavioural research is a human endeavour focusing on human lives and experiences, there are diverse and ever-evolving pathways towards achieving that unity. Any one pathway will only ever yield partial glimpses into human life and diversity of potential choices serves to enrich, expand, and enlarge those glimpses in pursuit of more complete understanding. The book shows that researchers and the researched are far more connected than disconnected in this world and those connections are spread out through a network of interlinked complex systems. The book argues that pluralist systemic thinking provides the means by which a researcher's methodological choices for navigating the 'Data Triangle' (comprising data source, data gathering, and data analysis strategies) and the learning they provide can be fully and robustly contextualised with respect to those systems and the expectations and influences that emerge from them. Such contextualisations facilitate the refinement, augmentation, and/or narrowing of those choices during the researcher's journey. Anticipating choices downstream may have implications for more immediate choices and more immediate choices may create a cascade of necessary downstream choices. An essential part of contextualisation involves making choices about patterns of guiding assumptions, modes of knowledge building, and research frames. Researchers must develop the capacity to be flexible and adapt to unanticipated emergent events, obstacles, and political influences, making trade-offs where necessary throughout their research journey, always with an eye on both feasibility and quality. Importantly, research has no meaning unless the researcher can ensure that it connects with intended audiences via specific research outcomes, especially since the ultimate judgments about the convincingness, meaningfulness, quality, and utility of the research are vested in those audiences. Throughout the book, special attention is devoted to the role(s) that stakeholders and gatekeepers play in shaping the researcher's journey as well as to what can be learned from Indigenous/First Nations perspectives on social and behavioural research.

Publication Type: Book
Publisher: Springer Nature
Place of Publication: Singapore
ISBN: 9789819734627
9789819734610
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020: 441006 Sociological methodology and research methods
520105 Psychological methodology, design and analysis
350606 Marketing research methodology
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020: 280123 Expanding knowledge in human society
280121 Expanding knowledge in psychology
280114 Expanding knowledge in Indigenous studies
HERDC Category Description: A1 Authored Book - Scholarly
Extent of Pages: 474
Appears in Collections:Book
UNE Business School

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