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1 Day 2, Track 1, Session 1 INNOVATION WITHOUT BORDERS: INTERNATIONAL NETWORKS TO SOLVE GLOBAL CHALLENGES Vanessa Campo-Ruiz, ESF (Chair) Claire McNulty, British Council, UK Johanna Adami, VINNOVA, SE Ralf Altmeyer, Institut Pasteur Shanghai, FR
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2 Improving competitiveness through international collaborations: a European perspective Vanessa Campo-Ruiz, MD PhD Science Officer to the Chief Executive, European Science Foundation (ESF)
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3 Do you want to exploit your assets in a more efficient way?
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4 Do you want to find opportunities to renew your strengths?
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5 Do you want to find people who can help you solve your challenges with complementary resources and approaches?
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6 Do you want your work to have a greater global impact & help more people?
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7 International Collaborations can help you achieve these goals
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8 One possible approach: How ESF promotes international collaborations from the individual to the group
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European Science Foundation 9 Association of 67 national research organisations Research funding organisations Research performing organisations Academies and learned societies in 29 countries
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10 Scientific Domains Scientific Review Groups: Biomedical Sciences Humanities Social Sciences Life, Earth & Environmental Sciences Physical and Engineering Sciences Expert Boards and Committees: Marine Board European Polar Board Nuclear Physics European Collaboration Committee European Space Sciences Committee Committee on Radio Astronomy Frequencies Material Science and Engineering Expert Committee
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11 ESF serves researchers & organisations through collaborative instruments strategy & policy actions
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12 from the individual researcher to the group
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13 European Young Investigator Awards EURYI (2003-2007) Outstanding young scientists of any discipline € for creating their own team at European centres of their choice
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14 Exploratory Workshops 1-3 day international meetings, to brainstorm around a specific topic Outcomes: new networks sharing ideas & resources, common guidelines, joint funding applications, joint doctoral programmes….
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15 Programmes for Collaborative Research, Networking and Dissemination Activities: RNPs and EUROCORES Topics from scientists, € from ESF member organisations Exchange visits, workshops, seminars, publications, training programmes, internet activities… Virtual & physical interactions; leveraging complementary strengths
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Exploratory Workshops Conferences RNPs EUROCORES FUNDING RESEARCHERS1030100 15 k€ 100 k€ 1 m€ ECOSYSTEM OF INSTRUMENTS FOR INTERNATIONAL COLLABORATIONS
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17 For researchers + administrators + KOLs: POLICY domain-specific & transdisciplinar
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18 Domain-specific Scientific Policy Position papers on emerging issues Foresight reports Domain-specific strategies Conferences
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19 European Medical Research Councils 74 Publications 2006-2013 Strategic activity Forward Looks8 Science Policy Briefings13 Position Papers6 White Papers2 Networking activity Research Networking Programmes 10 EUROCORES6 Miscellaneous publications Journal articles6 EMRC newsletters20 Other3
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20 Overarching, Transdisciplinary Policy Publications: European Guidelines & Codes Research Integrity, Peer Review Advocacy Actions: Gender Balance, Open Access, ….Internationalisation of research, Evaluation, ….Research Infrastructures
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21 High-level contributions to the Innovation Union, the European Research Area, and international collaborations: European Union: EC, EP, advisory bodies International R&I stakeholders: LERU, EUA, ALLEA, ScienceEurope, Euroscience, NSF, NIH, AAAS Intergovernmental organisations: Council of Europe, United Nations´ WHO & UNESCO…
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22 Take-home messages
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IC are often decentralised processes led by champions. More successful outcomes when researchers can chose what to study & with whom.
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Invest in building trust among people. Informal networks and pilot projects are efficient to share ideas, shape more robust projects, and lower risks of failure.
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Groups are often asymmetric. Design win-win scenarios for all partners. Start with bottom-up rules and agreements (codes of good practices, MOUs) that reassure participants, minimise risk of drop-outs and misunderstandings, and incorporate contingency plans.
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Partnerships become vulnerable in the implementation phase (specification of deliverables, timelines, transfer of funds, etc). Experienced research leaders and administrators are paramount to success.
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Neutral coordinators can serve as the honest broker, help minimise conflicts, help drive forward the agenda, and ensure multiannual funding.
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WE CAN BUILD OUR JOINT WAY FORWARD
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29 Thank you for your attention Vanessa Campo-Ruiz vcamporuiz@esf.org
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30 Day 2, Track 1, Session 1 INNOVATION WITHOUT BORDERS: INTERNATIONAL NETWORKS TO SOLVE GLOBAL CHALLENGES Vanessa Campo-Ruiz, ESF (Chair) Claire McNulty, British Council, UK Johanna Adami, VINNOVA, SE Ralf Altmeyer, Institut Pasteur Shanghai, FR
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