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JHEP - Coordination action in support of the implementation of a Joint Programming Initiative (JPI) on Cultural Heritage and Global Change :
a new challenge for Europe "
WP Leader: Dr. Gail Lambourne Project Manager: Dr. Lyndsey Stoakes
Arts & Humanities Research Council (UK)
WP2: Development and Elaboration of the Strategic Research Agenda
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WP2: Objectives
Focus and sharpen European actions by addressing research gaps & identifying priorities
Help streamline national programmes to reduce overlaps and exploit synergies
Overcome the fragmentation of information on the state of research in MS
Encourage better collaboration among public, private & business sectors
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WP2: Objectives (cont.)
Foster mutually reinforcing alignment between research and other policies at European level
Identify actions to be taken to address gaps in research areas and innovative methodologies
Provide coordination of research in the cultural heritage area contributing to a fully operational ERA and strengthening Europe’s leadership and competitiveness
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WP2: Tasks
Task 2.1 Development of Common Framework to enable prioritisation of research
Task 2.2 Identification of research areas, activities, gaps & needs by National Consultation Panels (NCPs)
Task 2.3 Undertake a joint foresight study & an assessment of technological capability
Task 2.4 Input by the CH JPI Scientific committee
Task 2.5 Production of the Strategic Research Agenda
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JPI WP2 Timeline 2011 2012
Deliverables Oct Nov Dec Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec
D2.1 Setting up of Expert Group D2.2 Report by Expert Group on the development of a Common Framework
D2.3 Report on Expert Group on the completed frameworks
D2.4 Foresight Study and Technological Capability Report
D 2.5 Strategic Research Agenda
D 2.6 Report by CH JPI Scientific Committee
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Summary
• Present the process so far
Includes:
• Inputs from the National Consultation Panels (NCPs)
• Structure of the Strategic Research Agenda (SRA)
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Process so far
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• Nov 2011 - Expert Group formed and ToRs agreed
• 13th Jan 2012 - First draft of Common Framework developed at EG meeting
• 30th Jan 2012 – JPI Scientific Committee 1st meeting
• Jan/Feb 2012 – Scientific Committee developed/refined common framework
Process so far
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• 17th Feb 2012 - Final approval of Common Framework by coordinators
• 21st Feb 2012 - Common Framework (with 62 research areas) circulated to all Participants
• 17 participants and 8 observers involved. • March 2012 – Steering Committee meeting – further guidance
Process so far
Task 2.1: Development of Common Framework to
enable prioritisation of research.
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WP2: Tasks
Task 2.1 Development of Common Framework to enable
prioritisation of research
Task 2.2 Identification of research areas, activities, gaps & needs by National Consultation Panels (NCPs)
Task 2.3 Undertake a joint foresight study & an assessment of technological capability
Task 2.4 Input by the CH JPI Scientific committee
Task 2.5 Production of the Strategic Research Agenda
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As a reminder, NCPs were asked to:
• Review the Common Framework template and guidance provided
• Add additional, high priority research areas, gaps and needs as required.
• Rank top 12 priorities in terms of: a) the NCP (national) priorities, and b) requiring European collaboration.
Process so far
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• 4th May 2012 - Deadline for inputs from NCPs
- responses received from 16 Participants
• Summer / Autumn 2012 - Expert Group analysed NCP inputs
• Summer 2012 - Foresight work began
• September 2012 - JPI Scientific Committee 2nd meeting
• JPI Scientific Committee approved process so far
Process so far
Task 2.2 Identification of research areas, activities,
gaps & needs by National Consultation Panels (NCPs).
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WP2: Tasks
Task 2.1 Development of Common Framework to enable prioritisation of research
Task 2.2 Identification of research areas, activities, gaps &
needs by National Consultation Panels (NCPs)
Task 2.3 Undertake a joint foresight study & an assessment of technological capability
Task 2.4 Input by the CH JPI Scientific committee
Task 2.5 Production of the Strategic Research Agenda
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Input from NCPs
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• Of the 16 respondents, 8 ranked priorities in terms of European collaboration only. • Very good correlation between national and European priorities for each respondent: - at least 10 of the national priorities matched the European priorities for each country - where a ‘national priority’ did not appear in a participant’s ‘European priority’ list, it often appeared as another participant’s ‘European priority’.
NCP inputs
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• Some research areas were added, others were amended, many stayed the same as in the common framework. • No drivers were added. • In total, 86 separate prioritised research areas were received and then mapped/aligned. • 31 new research areas • Additional comments were provided by some participants.
NCP inputs
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Analysis of input
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The SRA is about presenting cultural heritage as an integrated research area to policy makers. Different types of heritage cannot be seen as separate issues and thus the priorities identified in the SRA cover (and aim to go beyond) the tangible, intangible and digital aspects.
Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
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There were two levels of prioritisation in this process:
– NCPs identified and prioritised 12 research areas each;
– Expert Group mapped and aligned all these research areas with each other.
• The information under research gaps and needs, as well as the comments provided by participants informed this mapping.
• Where an individual priority was only mentioned once, it was subsumed into a ‘higher’ and ‘larger’ priority.
Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
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Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
Risk assessment. Two participants prioritised this as 2nd and 7th
Risk management of all kinds of heritage. One participant prioritised this as 10th
The Expert Group harmonised these two as: ‘Integrating risks’ but with a description that included the detail provided by the NCPs.
Example:
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Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
Cultural interpretations of heritage and the historical context for it.
6 participants prioritised this as 1st, 1st, 2nd, 8th, 9th, 12th
Landscape heritage. 3 participants prioritised this as 1st, 4th, 10th
Policy and identity 1 participant prioritised this as 1st
Heritage concepts and theories 1 participant prioritised this as 4th
Cultural diversity and identity 1 participant prioritised this as 4th
Mediated cultural heritage 1 participant prioritised this as 5th
Links between cultural heritage and natural resources
1 participant prioritised this as 6th
Example:
Continued….
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Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
The significance of heritage: the existential value of cultural heritage
1 participant prioritised this as 6th
Cognitive-perceptual theory 2 participants prioritised this as 10th and 11th
The significance of heritage from inventory to landscape analysis
1 participant prioritised this as 6th
The significance of cultural heritage: valuation and selection
1 participant prioritised this as 6th
Material and immaterial cultural heritage and natural resources
1 participant prioritised this as 8th
Cultural Heritage ethics and identity 10 participants prioritised this as 2nd, 3rd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, 9th, 10th, 12th
Heritage scales, synergies and dissonances 1 participant prioritised this as 7th
The Expert Group harmonised these as: ‘Identity and perception’ but with a description that included the detail provided by the NCPs.
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• Both the count and level of priority are being used in this process. • The work around drivers will now be taken forward as part of the Foresight study. • These fell naturally into further groups of priorities which have been called ‘Research Priorities’. • Aim was to have coherent Research Priorities that, where possible, covered the tangible, intangible and digital cultural heritage.
Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
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Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
Research Priorities:
Developing a reflective society (Recognition)
Will include:
• Identity and perception (for example, cultural interpretations of heritage, significance of heritage, diversity and identity).
• Values (for example, includes cultural memory and values).
• Ethics (for example, rights and responsibilities, ownership, ethical implications of access to cultural heritage including new forms of access, consequences for CH as a result of demographic changes).
• Insight into drivers (from Foresight work) that could have a bearing on these areas.
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Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
Research Priorities:
Connecting people with heritage (Access)
Will include:
• Protection through use (for example, includes energy efficiency of historic buildings, value creation of heritage, revitalising built and landscape heritage).
• Sustainability (for example, understanding embodied energy in heritage materials, structures and assemblies).
• Security (for example, management strategies for secure access to, for example, objects, archaeological sites, cultural landscapes).
• Heritage information (for example, digitisation, information processes, copyright).
• Digital interaction.
• Insight into drivers (from Foresight work) that could have a bearing on these areas.
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Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
Research Priorities:
Creating knowledge (Interpretation)
Will include:
• Linking (for example, linking quantitative and qualitative data, GIS on tangible and intangible heritage; using new technologies to link disparate digital contents and other CH information; reference collections (including digital), overviews of CH).
• Change (for example, understanding and modelling of material decay, investigation of damage mechanisms, consequences of land use changes for CH).
• Methods and measurement (for example, instrumentation, non-invasive testing, telesurvey, technical analysis, environmental assessment and monitoring).
• Integrating risks/risk management.
• Insight into drivers (from Foresight work) that could have a bearing on these areas.
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Expert Group analysis of NCP inputs
Research Priorities:
Safeguarding the cultural heritage resource (Protection)
Will include: • Conservation (for example, material, technologies and procedures for maintenance and conservation, conservation of traditional, modern and contemporary art and heritage materials, as well as digitized and born digital contents). • Global and climate change (for example, mitigating the effects of climate change, managing material, site and structural change, stabilising CH endangered by changes in environmental conditions). • Insight into drivers (from Foresight work) that could have a bearing on these areas.
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Structure of the SRA
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• Agreed that the SRA should not just be a long list of research topics/projects. • The structure of the SRA has emerged as a result of the NCP inputs. • However, other SRAs were reviewed to ensure that the emerging structure was fit for purpose. • Now the main analysis and mapping is complete, the levels of priority are no longer used.
Structure of the SRA
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The working structure of the SRA is as follows:
– Foreword, including an overview of the JPI on Cultural
Heritage and Global Change (by JPI Coordinator)
– Preface for the SRA (by the Chair of the Scientific Committee)
– Executive Summary
Working Structure of SRA
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– Introduction
Explains the scope of the SRA and how it covers the tangible, intangible and
digital as well as different forms of cultural heritage (e.g. existing forms of
CH as well as underwater, industrial, battlefield, maritime, modern and
contemporary , recent and young).
– Current Research Landscape
General overview underpinned by NCP input. Not a research review.
Working Structure of SRA
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– Cultural Heritage Research Priorities
• Research Priorities • Developing a reflective society • Connecting people with heritage • Creating knowledge • Safeguarding the cultural heritage resource
• Cultural Heritage Research Enabling Framework
Working Structure of SRA
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Cultural Heritage Research Enabling Framework
• Query over whether some research areas, gaps and needs expressed by NCPs are scholarly research.
• These are now considered as general areas of enquiry and focus Examples include:
• Capability and capacity • Management strategies • Knowledge sharing • Research Infrastructure • Policy, laws and regulations
Working Structure of SRA
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Working Structure of SRA:
Foresight Study
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WP2: Tasks
Task 2.1 Development of Common Framework to enable prioritisation of research
Task 2.2 Identification of research areas, activities, gaps & needs by National Consultation Panels (NCPs)
Task 2.3 Undertake a joint foresight study & an assessment of technological capability
Task 2.4 Input by the CH JPI Scientific committee
Task 2.5 Production of the Strategic Research Agenda
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• Drivers and trends information will be identified across a range of
fields that are relevant to cultural heritage. The headings used to
collect and analyse drivers and trends will include:
evidence for the trend
potential implications and impacts, risks, opportunities etc.
• Drivers include:
Foresight Study
• Demography • Learning
• Globalisation • Gamification
• Internet of Things • Security Technologies
• Big Data • Philanthropy
• Climate Change • Crowdfunding Etc.
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• Analysis of trends and drivers
• Real-Time Delphi
• Online questionnaire
• Open October / November
• Identified over 200 people to be approached inc. NCPs and
Scientific Committee
• Scenario Workshop
• Hosted by UNESCO in November
• Chair of JPI Scientific Committee participating
• Final Report
Structure of SRA: Foresight Study
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WP2: Tasks
Task 2.1 Development of Common Framework to enable prioritisation of research
Task 2.2 Identification of research areas, activities, gaps & needs by National Consultation Panels (NCPs)
Task 2.3 Undertake a joint foresight study & an assessment of technological capability
Task 2.4 Input by the CH JPI Scientific committee
Task 2.5 Production of the Strategic Research Agenda
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– Delivery of the SRA Strategy
– Conclusion
– Annexes
• Development of the Strategic Research Agenda, include NCP
process.
• Supporting Documents and links to NCP inputs for
transparency.
• Foresight report.
Working structure of SRA
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• Aim is for the process to be transparent. • Once SRA is published, aim is for all inputs to be widely accessible.
Structure of SRA: Summary
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Conclusion
Deliverables Month Achieved
D 2.1: Setting up of Expert Group 1
D 2.2: Report by Expert Group on the development of the Common Framework
4
D 2.3: Report by Expert Group on the completed frameworks
10 (11) In progress
D 2.4: Foresight Study & Technological Capability Report
12 Started
D 2.5: Strategic Research Agenda 15 Started
D 2.6: Report by CH JPI Scientific Committee 15 -
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Thank you for listening!
“Phew!”