Page 68 - Sustainability Communication Interdisciplinary Perspectives and Theoritical Foundations
P. 68

4  Sustainable Communication as an Inter- and Transdisciplinary Discipline  51


            Thompson Klein, J. (1990). Interdisciplinarity: History, theory, and practice. Detroit: Wayne State
              University Press.
            Thompson Klein, J. (1996). Crossing boundaries: Knowledge, disciplinarities, and interdisciplin-
              arities. Charlottesville/London: University Press of Virginia.
            Thompson Klein, J. (2004). Prospects for transdisciplinarity. Futures, 36, 515–526.
            Thompson Klein, J. (2005). Interdisciplinary teamwork: The dynamics of collaboration and
              integration. In S. Derry, C. D. Schunn, & M. A. Gernsbacher (Eds.), Interdisciplinary collaboration:
              An emerging cognitive science (pp. 23–50). Mahwah: Erlbaum.
            Thompson Klein, J. (2010). Creating interdisciplinary campus cultures: A model for strength and
              sustainability. San Francisco: Wiley.
            Thompson Klein, J., Frodeman, R., & Mitcham, C. (2010). The oxford handbook of interdisciplinarity.
              Oxford: Oxford University Press.
            Van Dusseldorp, D., & Wigboldus, S. (1994). Interdisciplinary research for integrated rural
              development in developing countries: The role of social science. Issues in integrative Studies,
              12, 93–138.
            WBGU (German Advisory Council on Global Change) (1996). World in Transition: The Research
              Challenge. Annual Report 1996. Berlin: Springer.
            Weingart, P.  (2000). Interdisciplinartiy:  The  paradoxical  discourse. In  P. Weingart & N. Stehr
              (Eds.), Practising interdisciplinarity (pp. 25–41). Toronto: University Press.
            Weingart,  P.,  &  Stehr,  N.  (Eds.).  (2000).  Practising  interdisciplinarity.  Toronto:  University  of
              Toronto Press.
            West, M. A. (1996). Reflexivity and work group effectiveness: An conceptual integration. In M. A.
              West (Ed.), Handbook of work group psychology (pp. 555–579). Chichester: Wiley.
            Whitley, R. (1976). Umbrella and polytheistic scientific discipline and their elites. Social Studies
              of Science, 6, 471–497.
   63   64   65   66   67   68   69   70   71   72   73