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Universities, Innovation and Smart Specialisation. Document accompanying the Commission communication on Regional Policy contributing to smart growth in Europe 2020 (SEC/2010/1183)Key role of strategic intelligence in universities to
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1. The Role of Universities in Regional Innovation John Goddard
Emeritus Professor of Regional Development Studies
2. Universities, Innovation and Smart Specialisation Document accompanying the Commission communication on Regional Policy contributing to smart growth in Europe 2020 (SEC/2010/1183)
Key role of strategic intelligence in universities to identify the high value added activities which offer best chances of strengthening a regions competitiveness
Smart specialisation involves business, research centres and universities working together to identify a regions most promising areas of specialisation but also weaknesses that hamper innovation
Building Smart Specialisation is a process
Universities need to actively participate in this process in partnership with public, private and third sectors
In order to effectively do this requires an understanding of the principles of innovation/smart specialisation and the specific regional context
Building capacity through peer to peer learning, creating a community of practice and building effective learning systems will be essential
3. University Drivers Declining national funding for HE
Search for local support to assist with global aspirations in research and student recruitment
Increased local enrolments
Additional income for services to local businesses through consultancy and CPD
Indirect benefits of local environment to attract and retain creative academics and motivated students
Outward and visible manifestation of contribution to civil society
4. City and Regional Interests in HE HE as a major business
Global gateways for marketing and attracting inward investment
Generation of new business and sources of advise to established businesses
Enhancing local human capital through graduate retention and professional updating
Content and audience for cultural programmes
Contribution to health, well being, social inclusion and environmental sustainability
5. The regionally engaged multi-modal and multi-scalar university (after Arbo and Benneworth)
7. BUT HOW PRINCIPLES ARE TRANSLATED INTO PRACTICE REQUIRES A SOPHISTICATED ANALYSIS AND UNDERSTANDING OF THE LOCAL CONTEXT
8. Case Study: Region Vrmland and Karlstad University SLIM II project SLIM II was launched in 2009 with total funding of 2.1 million, of which 1.05 million ERDF. It promoted existing co-operation and looked for ways to expand it. A total of 700 companies (with 60,000 employees) in 15 clusters participated in SLIM II. The project also linked the clusters and universities. SLIM II successfully brought the actors together face-to-face and built acquaintance and mutual trust.
Learning Points
The fact that the University recognised that regional engagement can enhance the core missions of teaching and research was a big enabler of the project initiation and success
Another enabler was that Region Vrmlands strategy has explicitly been to strengthen collaboration within and between key regional actor organisations and the University in the context of the regions competitive strengths
Understanding that co-operation processes cannot be directly transferred to other regions while the principles remain fixed the practice must be adapted to suit the specific environment
Having participated in a peer review and self evaluation process (OECD/IMHE review of the contribution of universities to regional development, 2006) was critical in understanding the nature of the role of the University in the innovation process
9. EU Guide: Connecting Universities to Regional Growth The guide will
provide an analysis how universities can impact upon regions and how they can be mobilised for regional economic, social and cultural development
explore (illustrated by clear and compelling examples from around the EU) some of the potential delivery mechanisms that can be used to maximize the contribution of universities to regional growth
outline the key principles in building university /regional partnership, particularly the drivers and barriers on both sides behind such partnership working and how these barriers may be overcome.
position potential programmes and interventions within the framework for ERDF support
The guide will be illustrated with 15 examples of good practice describing existing regional partnerships for innovation involving universities. The sources used to inform the content of the Guide will include documentary evidence from workshops, self evaluations and peer reviews from the following programmes :
Reviews of Higher Education in City and Regional Development (OECD)
European Drivers for a Regional Innovation Platform (EU Lifelong Learning Programme)
Sharing Innovative Practices in University Management - Collaborative Research (DG Research)
10. Building the Bridge between HEIs and Regions