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crossdisciplinaire

Crossdisciplinaire (French for cross-disciplinary) refers to practices that involve collaboration across multiple academic disciplines to address questions or problems that exceed the scope of any single field. It emphasizes the integration of theories, methods, data, and perspectives from diverse domains to generate new approaches and insights. Crossdisciplinaire work can occur in research, higher education, industry, and cultural projects, and typically aims to move beyond traditional disciplinary boundaries rather than operate within them.

In francophone and European contexts, crossdisciplinaire is related to, but not identical with, related terms such

Methods include forming joint research teams, cross-training researchers, sharing data, developing common frameworks, and co-designing projects

Applications span science, engineering, health, policy, and the arts. Examples include climate research that combines meteorology,

as
multidisciplinarité,
interdisciplinarité,
and
transdisciplinarité.
Multidisciplinary
work
assembles
parallel
contributions;
interdisciplinarity
seeks
to
synthesize
across;
transdisciplinarity
extends
beyond
academia
to
include
non-academic
knowledge.
Crossdisciplinaire
is
often
used
as
a
flexible
umbrella
term
for
boundary-crossing
and
synthesis.
with
stakeholders.
Challenges
include
linguistic
and
methodological
differences,
differing
epistemologies,
conflicting
aims,
and
institutional
or
funding
structures
that
reward
single-discipline
outputs.
Assessing
cross-disciplinary
work
can
require
new
metrics
for
collaboration
and
impact.
economics,
and
political
science;
urban
planning
that
integrates
architecture,
sociology,
and
ecology;
and
education
studies
that
blend
pedagogy,
psychology,
and
cognitive
science
to
explore
learning.