Universiteit Leiden

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Research project

CHERRIES - Constructing Healthcare Environments through Responsible Research Innovation and Entrepreneurship Strategies

The project will support Responsible, Research and Innovation (RRI) policy experiments in the healthcare sector in three European territories: in Murcia (ES), Örebro (SE) and the Republic of Cyprus (CY). CHERRIES will engage the territorial stakeholder ecosystems in participatory agenda setting, need articulation and institutional reflection processes. These will serve as starting point for collective approaches with shared responsibilities aiming to create more open, inclusive and self-sustaining territorial research and innovation (R&I) ecosystems.

Duration
2020 - 2022
Contact
Ingeborg Meijer
Partners

Zentrum für Soziale Innovation,  European Business and Innovation Centre, Conoscenza e Innovazione, TIBBioMed, Servicio Murciano de Salud, Fundación Cento Europeo de Empresas e Innovación de Murcia, Comunidad Autónoma de la Región de Murcia, Orebro Lans Landsting, Actíva, CY.R.I.C., Aretaeio Iatrikon Kentron

In the context of R&I policies, three major trends are relevant for the CHERRIES project:

  1. Responsible Research and Innovation as the key action of the “Science with and for Society” objective, created a process in which societal actors (researchers, citizens, policy makers, business, third sector organisations, etc.) jointly contribute to better align the innovation process and its outcomes with the values, needs and expectations of society.
  2. Both, the definition of Societal Grand Challenges (SGC) and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) mark the return of the public sector as a major actor in shaping the directionality of innovation. The new mission and challenge orientation requires new partnerships as public agencies co-create new technological opportunities and market landscapes.
  3. During the last decades, the territorial level has been gaining importance for innovation policy because the role of proximity and the presence of knowledge-related institutions are thought to have a positive influence. Thereby, the smart specialisation strategy (RIS3) programme is the most ambitious and endowed approach of EU-funded territorial innovation policies so far.

CWTS will be involved in mapping of territorial policies, the co-creation of new policy mixes based on the regional experimentation, and in the monitoring and evaluation of the approach. Grounding our knowledge base in this area of regional knowledge and innovation systems is shown by the recent publication:  Scientific knowledge production in European regions: patterns of growth, diversity and complexity.

ipb@cwts.leidenuniv.nl

https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/872873

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