Synopsis: Education: Level of education:


REINVENT EUROPE.pdf

Professor Maureen Mckelvey, Professor of Industrial Management, School of business, Economics and Law, University of Gothenburg. The panel would like to thank all those who participated in the online consultation from July to August 2009

and stimulate universities and public research centres to be more open and international. The ideas in this report were created co through a series of meetings by the panel

University of Stuttgart-Hohenheim; President of the Lisbon Civic Forum We, as a network of European third sector leaders, welcome the recommendations of the Business Panel on the future EU innovation policy.

I recommend spending a morning in a kindergarten to relearn constructive, explorative and role play. 12 Here we represent some of the key conclusions of our work in the form of sea stars:

University of Rotterdam, presentation to Netherlands Centre for Social Innovation. 2 The Social Economy in the European union:

University training must also shift from management of existing organizations to the new styles and structures required for innovation. 5 An inspiration could be the Danish Mindlab, bringing together the ministry of Economic and Business Aff airs,

Assuring access and providing signifi cant investment in digital infrastructures are necessary to realise the vision of lifelong learning as well as to increase the competitive environment necessary for advanced learning in universities and colleges.

and universities typically remain undervalued and underutilised. From innovation unlimited There is no evidence to suggest that a public body would be better at allocating capital to innovation than a properly regulated and incentivised private sector.

A proper market for IPR will allow universities, public research organisations and small companies to fi nd better partners

It is intended that the Fund will buy patent licences from public universities and research centres

which will begin testing the operation with volunteer universities and research centres. The necessary tools to develop exchanges

public sector, universities, as well as large companies. Such openness and collaboration is required in an early stage of ideas,

Closed innovation systems of laboratories, universities, research institutes, art schools, corporations, public administrations, professions are no longer a viable approach for future innovation.

Stimulate universities and public research centres to be more open and international reforming incentive and performance systems,

We benefi tted from the university and teaching perspective from our rapporteur and a wealth of policy knowledge from the Commission and various thought leaders who joined our meetings.

Professor Maureen Mckelvey, Professor of Industrial Management, School of business, Economics and Law, University of Gothenburg. 30 Mandate of the panel Context:

and thereby provide funding to universities and fi rms to fi nd technological solutions. In the last decades,

Andreas Pyka, University of Stuttgart-Hohenheim; President of the Lisbon Civic Forum For the fi rst time the social dimension of Europe is recognized as a source of innovation,


Research and Innovation Strategy for the smart specialisation of Catalonia.pdf

Open innovation and cooperation amongst the quadruple helix stakeholders (universities, industry, governments and innovation users) is key to generating new opportunities,

This consultation attracted considerable participation (176 contributions), mainly from the fields of universities, research and business.

and there are knowledge hubs (universities and technology and research centres) which foster innovation. For more detailed analysis, see the document Analysis of Leading Sectors

The fifteen Connect-EU working parties are all open groups formed by public and private stakeholders (companies, business associations, universities, etc.

Objectives 3. Tools and Policies 35 Main stakeholders Companies, business associations, cluster organisations, universities, research centres, technology centres, foundations and institutions linked to R&d&i,

Main stakeholders Technology centres, research centres, hospitals and associated foundations, university groups and other public or not-for-profit organisations in the science and technology system, and companies.

Support for university groups focuses on marketing their technological services and the results of their research, with the goal of promoting the third and fourth university missions,

Main stakeholders Universities, research centres, technology centres, companies and business associations. Government of Catalonia, State, European funds and other public/private sources of finance.

However, there exists a problem of connection that makes it more difficult for knowledge gathered at universities

To help adapt university degrees to the needs of the production system. To increase the number of researchers of excellence in the R&d&i system.

Objectives 3. Tools and Policies 40 Main stakeholders Financing Universities, research centres, Catalan public authorities, the education system, business associations and other organisations.

The investment and knowledge of universities and research and technology centres can be capitalized through technology mechanisms such as the establishment of new technology-based firms,

Main stakeholders Research centres, technology centres, hospital research and valorisation units and university groups. Government of Catalonia, State, European funds and other public/private sources of finance.

a range of different stakeholders (companies, technology centres, universities and R&d centres) take part in such processes,

Main stakeholders Catalan public authorities, universities, research centres, technology centres, companies and business associations. Government of Catalonia, State, European funds and other public/private sources of finance.

They also reinforce the role played by universities as drivers for development in the territory.

To strengthen the universities'fourth mission. To generate new economic and job creation opportunities in the territory.

Main stakeholders Local authorities, companies, business associations, cluster organisations, universities, research centres, technology centres and other bodies in the territory.

and entrepreneurship to secondary and tertiary education in order to encourage entrepreneurial vocations amongst young people. -To improve the training received by entrepreneurs.

Moreover, it is vital to establish at universities, research and technology centres, etc. a framework of regulations and preliminary agreements to facilitate the creation of companies,

Objectives Main stakeholders Catalan public authorities, universities, companies, business associations, organisations and research and technology centres.

and potential creators of international enterprises in cooperation with universities and business schools. 3. Tools and Policies 53 P. 4. 3. Social innovation Social innovation can be defined as a series of cooperation

administrations and universities. Financing To support strategic change in companies. To promote business and public-private cooperation.

Innovation must be present in curriculums for vocational training, university degrees and MA courses related to the production sector,

Company-university and company-vocational training centre cooperation programmes enable students to develop projects with companies

Further advances should also be made in the process of modernising the universities so that they adapt to the knowledge society,

To this end support for doctoral studies at companies should continue to be provided. Financing To introduce integrated vocational training generally.

To help adapt university degrees to the needs of the production system. To increase the number of researchers of excellence in the R&d&i system.

Objectives Main stakeholders Universities, research centres, Catalan public authorities, the education system, business associations and other organisations.

The Agency for Management of University and Research Grants, which is responsible for distributing funds for research through public and competitive calls for proposals,


Research and Innovation Strategy in Catalonia.pdf

Open innovation and cooperation amongst the quadruple helix stakeholders (universities, industry, governments and innovation users) is key to generating new opportunities,

This consultation attracted considerable participation (176 contributions), mainly from the fields of universities, research and business.

and there are knowledge hubs (universities and technology and research centres) which foster innovation. For more detailed analysis, see the document Analysis of Leading Sectors

The fifteen Connect-EU working parties are all open groups formed by public and private stakeholders (companies, business associations, universities, etc.

Objectives 3. Tools and Policies 35 Main stakeholders Companies, business associations, cluster organisations, universities, research centres, technology centres, foundations and institutions linked to R&d&i,

Main stakeholders Technology centres, research centres, hospitals and associated foundations, university groups and other public or not-for-profit organisations in the science and technology system, and companies.

Support for university groups focuses on marketing their technological services and the results of their research, with the goal of promoting the third and fourth university missions,

Main stakeholders Universities, research centres, technology centres, companies and business associations. Government of Catalonia, State, European funds and other public/private sources of finance.

However, there exists a problem of connection that makes it more difficult for knowledge gathered at universities

To help adapt university degrees to the needs of the production system. To increase the number of researchers of excellence in the R&d&i system.

Objectives 3. Tools and Policies 40 Main stakeholders Financing Universities, research centres, Catalan public authorities, the education system, business associations and other organisations.

The investment and knowledge of universities and research and technology centres can be capitalized through technology mechanisms such as the establishment of new technology-based firms,

Main stakeholders Research centres, technology centres, hospital research and valorisation units and university groups. Government of Catalonia, State, European funds and other public/private sources of finance.

a range of different stakeholders (companies, technology centres, universities and R&d centres) take part in such processes,

Main stakeholders Catalan public authorities, universities, research centres, technology centres, companies and business associations. Government of Catalonia, State, European funds and other public/private sources of finance.

They also reinforce the role played by universities as drivers for development in the territory.

To strengthen the universities'fourth mission. To generate new economic and job creation opportunities in the territory.

Main stakeholders Local authorities, companies, business associations, cluster organisations, universities, research centres, technology centres and other bodies in the territory.

and entrepreneurship to secondary and tertiary education in order to encourage entrepreneurial vocations amongst young people. -To improve the training received by entrepreneurs.

Moreover, it is vital to establish at universities, research and technology centres, etc. a framework of regulations and preliminary agreements to facilitate the creation of companies,

Objectives Main stakeholders Catalan public authorities, universities, companies, business associations, organisations and research and technology centres.

and potential creators of international enterprises in cooperation with universities and business schools. 3. Tools and Policies 53 P. 4. 3. Social innovation Social innovation can be defined as a series of cooperation

administrations and universities. Financing To support strategic change in companies. To promote business and public-private cooperation.

Innovation must be present in curriculums for vocational training, university degrees and MA courses related to the production sector,

Company-university and company-vocational training centre cooperation programmes enable students to develop projects with companies

Further advances should also be made in the process of modernising the universities so that they adapt to the knowledge society,

To this end support for doctoral studies at companies should continue to be provided. Financing To introduce integrated vocational training generally.

To help adapt university degrees to the needs of the production system. To increase the number of researchers of excellence in the R&d&i system.

Objectives Main stakeholders Universities, research centres, Catalan public authorities, the education system, business associations and other organisations.

The Agency for Management of University and Research Grants, which is responsible for distributing funds for research through public and competitive calls for proposals,


research_infrastructures_en.pdf

and higher education-academic sectors so as the economic actors may operate in the markets of their products more efficiently, i e.,

or universities and mostly rely on the resources of large enterprises, i e.,,,,multinational companies. It is a non-negligible experience of the past 25 years that the utilisation rate (contracting in time

and also the use of the devices for educational purposes in higher education should be strengthened. The low degree of coordination in the use of domestic state (central budget) financing sources

The higher education sector shows a similar picture as the public finance sector. It used the investment sources primarily for machinery, equipment and instruments in most of the period under review,

and that both the university and the academic community are present. The state actors are involved also in the work,

the collaborations between the higher education and HAS research organisations serve as a reference in this regard;

and university research centres in the fields of material sciences, solid body physics, chemistry, life sciences and earth sciences;

Hungarian research organisations may participate in state-of-the-art multinational academic/university examinations. The ethical-professional supervision of the activity of the Hungarian organisation (HECRIN) is performed by the Medical Research Council.

and several universities and research institutes (ELTE, SZIE Gödöllo, NAIK ERTI, Nyme, and numerous agricultural corporations (e g.


RIS3summary2014 ireland.pdf

there were 70 firms with annual R&d expenditure over €5m. 2. 5 Higher education System The Department of education

including research policy, for the higher education sector. The Higher education Authority (HEA) and The irish Research Council (IRC) come under the aegis of the Department of education and Skills.

The Higher education Authority is the statutory funding authority for the universities, institutes of technology and a number of other designated institutions and is the advisory body to the Minister for Education and Skills in relation to the higher education sector.

The IRC focuses on the cultivation of skills and research expertise to address broad societal needs

and thus it funds across all disciplines and focuses on early stage career researchers. The National Strategy for Higher education to 2030, adopted in 2012,

establishes a new performance framework for public Irish Higher education institutions within which publiclyfunded higher education institutions are being held accountable to Government for their performance against defined national priorities.

This is monitored and advanced by way of the 8 Strategic Dialogue process now in place between the HEA and the higher education institutions.

This is the central means through which the institutions will develop their future performance in accordance with national economic and societal objectives.

The imperative to maximise Ireland's return on investment in research is emphasised explicitly in the Higher education System Performance Framework 2014-16 under System Level Objective 4:

To maintain an open and excellent public research system focused on the Government's priority areas

infrastructure and associated facilities to build the science base across many areas of scientific research in both our higher education institutions and other public research organisations;

The Higher education Authority is formally encouraging institutions to consolidate where it makes sense, and to form regional clusters with a view to building critical mass and increasing competitiveness in winning research funding.

and configuration of the higher education system (see Section 2. 5) to move to a smaller number of larger autonomous institutions with development of regional clusters.

Among the defining characteristics of the higher education system over the last decade and a half has been the effectiveness of structured forms of inter-institutional collaboration.

Current proposals are around developing regional clusters of universities and institutes of technology in the South, Midwest, West,

and in achieving closer synchronisation between research endeavour in Higher education institutions (HEIS), Government agencies, and industry. Ireland is now in the top 20 countries ranked by citations per thousand population

The rest of the membership comprised representatives from each of the relevant funding organisations active in the thematic area and representatives from the university sector, the institutes of technology sector and the enterprise sector.

and higher education representative bodies to provide formal written inputs to the stakeholder engagement documents compiled by each TWG.

(i e. total Government investment in research less the research component of the block grant to HEIS and the funding administered by the enterprise development agencies for in-company performed R&d).

and fellowships with industry support for commercially relevant applied research and the development of commercial expertise in the HEI sector investment in research infrastructure focused international collaboration. 22 PRTLI (5th

Cycle 2011-2016) The Programme for Research in Third-Level Institutions (PRTLI), managed by the Higher education Authority, supports the provision of top-class research infrastructure (buildings,

laboratories and cutting edge equipment) as well as human capital development through Structured Phd/Emergent Technology programmes across Ireland's HEIS.

Technology Centres are publicprivate research centres of excellence that connect industry to the Higher education sector to increase the generation and availability of new

Supports Technology Transfer Strengthening by funding dedicated staff within the Universities to ensure that best use is made of research outputs with commercial potential. 23 Supports High Potential Start up Companies

funding for R&d programmes in the higher education sector administered by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) and others and core funding via the Department of education and Skills and the Higher education Authority (HEA);

funding for business sector R&d, administered via State agencies including IDA Ireland, Enterprise Ireland and others;

This growth will be driven through a continuation of a supportive fiscal environment for R&d investment as well as supports for higher education R&d industry linkages with higher education researchers, commercialisation of research results, in-company R&d and start-up companies.

Measures underway by the Higher education Authority to reform the higher education system including issues such as strategic dialogue and performance based funding compacts,

consolidation to improve institutional quality, development of regional clusters and strategic inter-institutional alliances technological university proposals.


RIS3summary2014.pdf

there were 70 firms with annual R&d expenditure over €5m. 2. 5 Higher education System The Department of education

including research policy, for the higher education sector. The Higher education Authority (HEA) and The irish Research Council (IRC) come under the aegis of the Department of education and Skills.

The Higher education Authority is the statutory funding authority for the universities, institutes of technology and a number of other designated institutions and is the advisory body to the Minister for Education and Skills in relation to the higher education sector.

The IRC focuses on the cultivation of skills and research expertise to address broad societal needs

and thus it funds across all disciplines and focuses on early stage career researchers. The National Strategy for Higher education to 2030, adopted in 2012,

establishes a new performance framework for public Irish Higher education institutions within which publiclyfunded higher education institutions are being held accountable to Government for their performance against defined national priorities.

This is monitored and advanced by way of the 8 Strategic Dialogue process now in place between the HEA and the higher education institutions.

This is the central means through which the institutions will develop their future performance in accordance with national economic and societal objectives.

The imperative to maximise Ireland's return on investment in research is emphasised explicitly in the Higher education System Performance Framework 2014-16 under System Level Objective 4:

To maintain an open and excellent public research system focused on the Government's priority areas

infrastructure and associated facilities to build the science base across many areas of scientific research in both our higher education institutions and other public research organisations;

The Higher education Authority is formally encouraging institutions to consolidate where it makes sense, and to form regional clusters with a view to building critical mass and increasing competitiveness in winning research funding.

and configuration of the higher education system (see Section 2. 5) to move to a smaller number of larger autonomous institutions with development of regional clusters.

Among the defining characteristics of the higher education system over the last decade and a half has been the effectiveness of structured forms of inter-institutional collaboration.

Current proposals are around developing regional clusters of universities and institutes of technology in the South, Midwest, West,

and in achieving closer synchronisation between research endeavour in Higher education institutions (HEIS), Government agencies, and industry. Ireland is now in the top 20 countries ranked by citations per thousand population

The rest of the membership comprised representatives from each of the relevant funding organisations active in the thematic area and representatives from the university sector, the institutes of technology sector and the enterprise sector.

and higher education representative bodies to provide formal written inputs to the stakeholder engagement documents compiled by each TWG.

(i e. total Government investment in research less the research component of the block grant to HEIS and the funding administered by the enterprise development agencies for in-company performed R&d).

and fellowships with industry support for commercially relevant applied research and the development of commercial expertise in the HEI sector investment in research infrastructure focused international collaboration. 22 PRTLI (5th

Cycle 2011-2016) The Programme for Research in Third-Level Institutions (PRTLI), managed by the Higher education Authority, supports the provision of top-class research infrastructure (buildings,

laboratories and cutting edge equipment) as well as human capital development through Structured Phd/Emergent Technology programmes across Ireland's HEIS.

Technology Centres are publicprivate research centres of excellence that connect industry to the Higher education sector to increase the generation and availability of new

Supports Technology Transfer Strengthening by funding dedicated staff within the Universities to ensure that best use is made of research outputs with commercial potential. 23 Supports High Potential Start up Companies

funding for R&d programmes in the higher education sector administered by Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) and others and core funding via the Department of education and Skills and the Higher education Authority (HEA);

funding for business sector R&d, administered via State agencies including IDA Ireland, Enterprise Ireland and others;

This growth will be driven through a continuation of a supportive fiscal environment for R&d investment as well as supports for higher education R&d industry linkages with higher education researchers, commercialisation of research results, in-company R&d and start-up companies.

Measures underway by the Higher education Authority to reform the higher education system including issues such as strategic dialogue and performance based funding compacts,

consolidation to improve institutional quality, development of regional clusters and strategic inter-institutional alliances technological university proposals.


RIS3_Canary Islands.pdf

Meetings with experts, universities, research centres, clusters, companies, chambers of commerce Public consultation Advice and review from several consultative bodies with participation of social, education, trade union

Two universities European Northern Observatory (IAC), Oceanic Platform (PLOCAN), research centers, new technology parks Fiscal regulation (lower taxation) Bottlenecks Low integration:

Chambers of commerce, universities CARACTERIZACIÓN DE LA PYME CANARIA: METODOLOGÍA COTEC1. 400 CUESTIONARIOSCÁMARAS DE COMERCIORECOMENDACIONESSERVICIO 1:

and with universities and research centers Linked to universities and business clusters Preferential access to funding instruments trough the technology parks program Fuerteventura:


RIS3_GUIDE_FINAL.pdf

74 Universities...78 Digital Agenda for Europe...81 Key enabling technologies...86 Cultural and creative industries...

such as in universities or public research institutes. Collaborative projects with local firms can help to reveal information about the future value of certain specialisations.

higher education institutions, public research institutes, independent innovators; whoever is placed best to discover the domains of R&d

This has led to an extension of entrepreneurial activities and higher education and research infrastructure to new areas such as satellites and GPS technologies. 14 Finally, radical foundation of a new domain:

In this case, links between local universities and strong public-private partnerships are the types of strategies that may be essential for smart specialisation to work.

'Groningen University. 15 existence of industries that are in tune with the relevant socioeconomic conditions

this helps to take into account innovation opportunities identified by leading actors (companies, universities, intermediaries, etc. Mixing regional experts with international experts helps to give more weight to the international competitiveness issue.

Potential actors relevant to the RIS3 process span from public authorities to universities and other knowledge-based institutions, investors and enterprises, civil society actors,

The most important types of organisation that need to be involved in the RIS3 process are public authorities, universities and other knowledge-based institutions, investors and enterprises, civil society actors,

and intellectual leadership (the people who play a leading role in connecting their universities to the worlds in and beyond their regions.

University of Tampere, Work Research center, Working Paper No. 85 (Final Report on Quadruple Helix Research for the CLIQ project, INTERREG IVC Programme.

and its significance for universities, businesses and the regional economy, would do much to promote a skill set that is critically important to the moderation of the RIS3 process, particularly of the entrepreneurial process of discovery,

Getting firms, universities, development agencies and regional governments to accept that innovation is a collective social endeavour where participants freely acknowledge that working in concert can deliver far more than working in isolation is arguably the most important ingredient in the‘recipe'for purposeful entrepreneurial search.

The onus of responsibility for creating such iterative processes rests primarily with public sector bodies, especially universities, development agencies and regional governments.

universities, development agencies and regional governments could jointly identify a project to explore the prospects for related variety in the regional economy.

The formation of a Knowledge Leadership Group would give an institutional expression to the alliance between universities

For many key actors involved in the region, notably private firms and leading universities, the development of the region will not be their primary focus.

universities can be critical actors. How does regional funding fit into this multilevel system? As a first step the region should use technical assistance funding to build capacity to tap into the knowledge base of

and scenario-planning exercises involving the public, private and higher education sectors, the chief aim of which would be to produce a regionally-attuned smart specialisation strategy.

Traditional SMES, high-tech companies, universities, transfer institutions, business intermediaries, local and regional authorities, national bodies, the media, etc. have a different understanding and expectations of an RIS.

reinforcing excellence in knowledge creation and developing new high-tech industries Knowledge and technology hubs Leading regions in science and technology Co-funding of universities:

niches, complementary to national science hubs Technology transfer instruments (university technology transfer offices, technology brokers at research centres) Talent attraction (from country and abroad), research grants for young graduates Cluster policies,

and tertiary education Promoting national training, lifelong learning schemes for companies and individuals Engaging regional stakeholders in external production networks Securing national infrastructure investments to enhance connectivity Source:

increased quality of production Increase of research activity in a region Research subsidies to enterprises or universities/research centres Increase in research expenditure in firms, increase in patents or publications Improved innovation performance,

Clusters, Innovation friendly business environments for SMES, Research infrastructures, centres of competence and science parks, Universities-enterprise cooperation, Digital agenda, Key enabling technologies, Cultural

Figure 7-The'trunk and branches'structure 31 Green growth Digital agenda Skills Clusters SME support Social Innovation Financial engineeringconnecting universities Key enabling

Science parks provide the advanced infrastructure on which research-intensive enterprises rely, besides the location factor, often in close proximity to a university.

and international cooperation. 70 http://ec. europa. eu/research/horizon2020/pdf/proposals/com (2011) 811 final. pdf 78 Universities Why should universities be part of smart specialisation?

Successful mobilisation of the resources of universities can have a strong positive effect on the achievement of comprehensive regional strategies.

Universities dealing with economics, public policy and administration, as well as those dealing with specific policy areas (such as industry, health, agriculture, environment and culture) can provide public authorities and private sectors with strategic advice,

Universities are a critical'asset'of the region mainly in the less developed regions where private sector may be weak or relatively small, with low levels of research and development activity.

which universities can contribute to regional innovation systems. Universities can, for instance, stimulate the entrepreneurial spirit of their staff

and students, provide advice and services to SMES, and participate in schemes promoting the training and placement of high level graduates in innovative businesses.

Furthermore, Universities and Businesses should directly cooperate in curricula design and curricula delivery to ensure that graduates have the right skills and transversal competences.

By having businesses cooperating with the educational side of Universities, talent attraction and retention would be enhanced in the region.

Universities can also play an important role in the field of vocational training. Barriers and challenges Improving the contribution of universities to regional growth by implementing such mechanisms requires the interconnection of the partners in the innovation systems.'

'Disconnections'may occur between the partners and the barriers to overcome are of a different nature.

They can be internal to the university and involve the capacity to‘reach out'to the wider region (i e. supply side).

For instance, universities are focused usually on teaching and research (driven by academic outputs) and are part of national academic systems that are targeted not to respond to regional needs.

As a result, some universities are viewed as being'in'the region but not'of'the region where they are located. 71 The term'university'includes all higher education institutions,

in line with the Commission's Communication on the modernisation agenda for universities COM (2006) 208.79 These barriers can also be linked to the capacity

and willingness of the public and private sector actors in the region to'reach in'to the university to seek expertise

and knowledge that can contribute to regional growth and development (i e. demand side). Successful partnerships involve'boundary spanners'providing leadership within

and across the partners and enabling a mutual understanding of the drivers affecting all the partners. Universities will appreciate the opportunities that their regions present for their activities as'living laboratories'opened to international linkages;

their private and public partners will benefit from their expertise for translating knowledge into innovation.

Universities and other knowledge institutions should be linked closely to the process of designing national/regional innovation strategies for smart specialisation.

For the next programming period, the investment's priorities proposed under the Cohesion Policy cover these aspects with an emphasis on connecting universities to regional growth and developing stronger partnerships within the knowledge triangle.

see the practical guide'Connecting universities to regional growth'that presents processes and delivery mechanisms for building capacity and incentives for universities and their regional partners to work together.

Based on examples it explores the following issues: establishing a regional higher education partnership to better understand the regional situation

and to overcome the barriers, with a possible technical assistance budget, ensuring mechanisms allowing universities and business in the region to cooperate in curricula design

and in jointly delivering education in an innovative way, fostering graduates with regional relevant competences

mapping the regional higher education system in terms of their degree-awarding ability, research activities and possible cooperation with regional partners,

assessing the connectivity of the universities to the regional public and private sectors to move towards a situation where universities are key players,

selecting, designing and evaluating interventions that strengthen the connectivity of universities in the region to the region, by moving from simple to complex projects.

In the future programming period 2014-2020, support under the European Agricultural Fund for Rural Development (EAFRD) could be provided to Universities in the following areas:

Knowledge transfer and information actions for the provision of vocational training and skills acquisition actions, demonstration activities and information actions.

Co-operation among different actors in the Union, agriculture, food chain, forestry sector and among other actors (including Universities) that contribute to achieving the objectives and priorities of rural development policies (e g. pilot projects;

and for Operational groups under the European Innovation Partnership where universities could also take part. References The European commission promotes several support tools at European level.

EU Guide'Connecting universities to regional growth':'Available on the website of the Smart Specialisation Platform, 72 University Business Forum:

A platform to promote cooperation between HEI and businesses at European level, 73 Marie Curie Initial Training Networks Industrial doctorates:

A pilot action promoting industrial Phd schemes, 74 Knowledge Alliances: Between higher education and businesses in educational issues, 75 Erasmus for all:

The Union Programme for Education, Training, Youth and Sport for the programming period 2014-2020.76 72 http://ipts. jrc. ec. europa. eu/activities/research-and-innovation

including technology developers (universities, research and technology organisations), start-ups, SMES and manufacturers. Consequently, a KETFOCUSED innovation policy allows most industrial sectors

Develop partnerships between national and regional authorities in charge of different public policies such as economic development, employment, higher education and culture.

and entities of all sizes and forms, including corporations, midcaps, small and medium-sized enterprises, special-purpose companies, public-private partnerships and joint ventures, research institutes, universities

the modernisation of universities and research organisations as well as developing technology auditing, international partner search and information campaigns to stimulate


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