RT Journal Article T1 Networks of knowledge and power: working collaboratively on the HoNESt project A1 Stuart Butler YR 2018 VO Special Issue: The Material Culture of Energy IS Spring 2018 K1 British history K1 European history K1 interdisciplinary research K1 nuclear history K1 Nuclear power K1 protest K1 social movements AB Working collaboratively across national and disciplinary boundaries poses both challenges and opportunities for historians. The results of international collaborative research projects are directly shaped by their structure and the people working on them, from opening up new avenues of enquiry, to talking at cross-purposes with colleagues from different disciplines. Writing in English Historical Review, Ludmilla Jordanova introduces the concept that history and social science pursue similar questions, but do so with different ‘habits of mind’. Jordanova proposes that it is the differences between these ‘habits of mind’ which can cause confusion and misunderstanding between scholars. In this article I will outline how these different habits have come to the fore in the History of Nuclear Energy and Society (HoNESt) project, and how the project has been planned to account for them. Such differences in ‘habits of mind’ whilst working collaboratively, transnationally and inter-disciplinarily, have shaped the research pursued, prompted us to ask new questions and provided surprising and unexpected results. NO These are focused on understanding societal engagement with nuclear energy, and on backcasting ideal futures. Further details can be found here: http://www.honest2020.eu/workpackages. NO They can be found here: http://www.honest2020.eu/d36-short-country-reports NO From the mid-1960s this became the Council for the Protection of Rural England then, since 2003, the Campaign to Protect Rural England. PB The Science Museum Group SN 2054-5770 LA eng DO 10.15180/180907 UL https://journal.sciencemuseum.ac.uk/article/networks-of-knowledge/ WT Science Museum Group Journal OL 30