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X-WR-CALNAME:JPI Urban Europe
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu
X-WR-CALDESC:Events for JPI Urban Europe
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DTSTART:20180101T000000
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191009T163000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191009T180000
DTSTAMP:20260416T205203
CREATED:20190923T115321Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190923T115321Z
UID:14543-1570638600-1570644000@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Urban and regional transition in widening countries and lagging regions: knowledge\, tools and platforms for mutual learning and exchange
DESCRIPTION:At the European Week of Regions and Cities\, the European Commission\, the Joint Research Centre of the European Commission and JPI Urban Europe will organize a session with focus on Urban and regional transitions in Widening countries and lagging regions and the best way they can be supported through smart specialisation and transnational cooperation. \nJPI Urban Europe has the aim to establish long-term policy relations and support urban transitions in and with Widening Countries and Europe’s Outermost Regions by engaging (urban) actors\, practitioners\, decision makers in its activities.Something which is in foucs in our EXPAND II project that aims at mobilising national communities of urban actors of Widening Countries and to be the platform to create\, combine\, discuss and make available knowledge and robust evidence for urban transition. With cases from the Azores\, Cyprus\, Romania and more Widening countries and regions\, we hope for a fruitful discussion and sharing of knowledge! \nAGENDA  \n16:30   Welcome and setting the scene \nSpeaker: Magda DE CARLI\, Head of Unit\, European Research Area and Country Intelligence\, DG Research and Innovation\, European Commission\, Karel Haegeman\, Joint Research Centre\, Sevilla (ES) \nA selection of four territorial case studies from Widening Countries and Lagging Regions will focus on reflections on the key requirements for urban transitions: the particular conditions\, the difficulties\, which support activities would be beneficial (R&I support\, networks\, funding\, etc.)  More concretely\, the session will focus on the following questions: \n\n\n\nHow to mobilise cities and urban actors for urban transitions? How to connect them to other regions/cities? Which benefits\, conditions and requirements of stakeholder engagement do exist in Widening Countries?\nHow to mobilise national R&I programmes to engage transnationally? What are barriers and opportunities? What are the benefits\, conditions and requirements of funding bodies to join transnational programmes and partnerships?\nWhat are the benefits\, conditions and requirements of policy support measures? How can RIS3 implementation at regional and city level be supported through transregional cooperation\, transnational ideation (entrepreneurial discovery) and project development (in development labs)?\n\n\n\nTo this end\, cases from 4 different territories will be presented: \n16:40   Targeted support to RIS3 implementation in the city of Bucharest and Ilfov region (JRC STRIVE in collaboration with the European Parliament and DG REGIO)\nSpeaker: Catalina Udrea\, Regional Development Agency\, Bucharest – Ilfov\, Planning Department \n16:50   JPI Urban Europe’s approach to Widening Countries and build capacities for urban transitions in science and policy (EXPAND II project)\nSpeaker: Natalia SA. Silva\, Regional Fund for Science and Technology of the Azores \n17:00   Support to ideation and project development of innovative ideas in an international context for Centro region (PT) (JRC STRIVE in collaboration with the European Parliament and DG REGIO)\nSpeaker: Ana Abrunhosa\, President of CDRC – Centro Region \n17:10   RISE.eu  (H2020-WIDESPREAD-01-2016-2017-TEAMING PHASE 2)\nSpeaker: Professor Giorgos Chrysanthou University of Cyprus (UCY)\, Research Director of RISE \n17:20   Discussion: How to get engaged and use ongoing networking and support options for Widening Countries and Lagging Regions. Panel discussion with DG RTD (RISE)\, JRC (STRIVE) and JPI Urban Europe (EXPAND II) \n17:50   Closing words Magda De Carli \n\nRead more and register here. 
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/urban-and-regional-transition-in-widening-countries-and-lagging-regions-knowledge-tools-and-platforms-for-mutual-learning-and-exchange/
LOCATION:Square – Brussels Convention Centre – 311+312\, Mont des Arts\, Brussels\, 1000\, Belgium
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191010T080000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191011T170000
DTSTAMP:20260416T205203
CREATED:20190329T073011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190329T073011Z
UID:13535-1570694400-1570813200@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Sharing Cities Summit Sweden
DESCRIPTION:Sharing Cities Sweden is organising a conference and exhibition on exploring the role of sharing cities in advancing the sustainable development goals. \nSave the date 10-11 October 2019 and stay tuned for more information soon! \nPlease register interest to attend the event by using this form and receive further information. \nFor questions\, please contact Kes McCormick.
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/sharing-cities-summit-sweden/
LOCATION:Lund and Malmö\, Sweden
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20191018T130000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20191018T140000
DTSTAMP:20260416T205203
CREATED:20190822T113406Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200403T082807Z
UID:14360-1571403600-1571407200@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Webinar Urban Lunch Talk #7: From Test to Success
DESCRIPTION:EDIT: Listen to the recording of the webinar on our Youtube channel\, here. \nWelcome to a webinar about Urban Living Labs 2.0. What does “success” mean in the context of urban experimentation and Urban Living Labs (and how do you get there in practice?) Can Urban Living Lab approcahes be tools for capacity building on wicked issues? It is time to make the investment in Urban Living Labs more sustainable and the learning more integrated.  \nUrban Living Labs have over the recent decade become a common type of co-creative experimentation\, offering us the opportunity to research and innovate on a wide variety of challenges in everyday setting and test hypotheses and elements to pathways for making transitions towards urban sustainable living. Europe seems particularly a hotspot for this approach. A typical Urban Living Lab will run for as long as a project (usually three years) and after this period data is collected\, results are drawn together\, a summary is written and\, in some situations\, changes in the wider urban context happen. However\, mounting concern by practice\, innovators\, and research is that this last step is too rare and after the project funding stops there is little systematic integration of any of the practical outputs. Is it really about “scaling up” successful results\, or rather about “scaling across”? In sum\, the intended and potential contribution by Urban Living Labs to urban transformation seems unfulfilled. In this webinar we explore going beyond Urban Living Labs towards a different paradigm offered by Living Labs 2.0… \n\nHow can cities\, innovators and researchers best synthesize and make use of results from many different successful test beds\, labs and urban experimenting?\nCan Urban Living Lab approcahes be tools for capacity building on wicked issues?\nHow might we integrate Urban Living Labs approaches into the DNA of Urban Governance? Should we?\n\nBring your knowledge\, projects and concerns to this webinar. Participate and exchnage in the chat\, Q&A and polls. \n  \nMeet…\n\nClaire Gordon is a Senior Researcher at Social Life (@SL_cities)an independent research organisation created by the Young Foundation in 2012 to work internationally on innovation and placemaking. As part of the Bright Future project (JPI Urban Europe ENSUF call)\, Social Life has been leading a process exploring how locally-driven social innovation can help respond to the needs of industrial towns in Slovenia\, Romania\, the Netherlands\, Finland and the UK. Alongside this\, Claire has worked on a range of place-based projects exploring the dynamics of neighbourhoods and how they are impacted and can be supported through development or regeneration. Prior to joining Social Life\, Claire worked as a researcher examining market approaches in development at the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS)\, University of London and at the University of Oxford. Her background is in the not-for-profit sector\, having spent several years at a digital inclusion NGO in Brazil.\nMichiel Dehaene is associate professor at the department of Architecture and Urban Planning\, Ghent University\, where he teaches courses in urban analysis and design. He is the chairman of the Flemish Jury of Urban Renewal Projects in Flanders.  His work focuses on sub-urban renewal\, the (planning) history of dispersed urban development\, and sustainable cities. His research includes systematic work on planning and design models to address the urbanizaton of food. Michiel currently works with the project “Urbanising in Place” (JPI Urban Europe SUGI call) which seeks to define components of an “agroecological urbanism”: a model of urbanisation which places food\, metabolic cycles and an ethics of land stewardship\, equality and solidarity at its core. The project works with communities of practice in in both South America and in Europe: Rosario\, Riga\, Brussels and London.\nJochen Wendel is a researcher at the European Institute for Energy Research (EIFER) in Karlsruhe\, Germany. He is coordinating\, together with Pia Laborgne\, the SUGI nexus project  Creating Interfaces project running Urban Living Labs in Poland\, Romania and the U.S. They work with capacity building for the urban food-water-energy (FWE) -nexus\, making the FWE-linkages understandable to the stakeholders (city government\, science\, business and citizens)\, and facilitating cooperation and knowledge exchange among them by using innovative approaches for local knowledge co-creation and participation through Urban Living Labs and Citizen Science. His background is in GIScience and he received his PhD in Geography from the University of Colorado Boulder\, USA. Prior to the Creating Interfaces project\, Jochen has worked on several projects related to smart cities applications\, location-based services\, and data visualization with several state agencies and private companies in the US and Germany. Pia Laborgne is sociologist and researcher at the European Institute for Energy Research (EIFER)\, focusing on urban sustainability strategies\, e.g. regarding citizen participation\, citizen science and stakeholder cooperation. With Jochen Wendel\, she is coordinating the SUGI nexus project “Creating Interfaces”.\nParticipants from anywhere in the world who will join the conversation through the chat room\, polls and Q&A sessions. Previous Urban Lunch Talks have attracted visitors from more than twenty different countries\, representing urban administration and public authorities\, research community\, business representatives and civil society.\nYour rapporteur\, Johannes Riegler\, Stakeholder Involvement Officer in JPI Urban Europe.\nYour host\, Caroline Wrangsten\, urban geographer and Assistant Project Manager in JPI Urban Europe.\n\nListen to the recording of the webinar on our Youtube channel\, here.
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/urban-lunch-talk-7-from-test-to-success/
ORGANIZER;CN="JPI Urban Europe":MAILTO:johannes.riegler@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20191029
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20191030
DTSTAMP:20260416T205203
CREATED:20191008T065436Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20191008T065436Z
UID:14701-1572307200-1572393599@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Symposium: Technology and Green Spaces
DESCRIPTION:Technology and Green Spaces is a one-day symposium showcasing the use of the latest technology in green spaces. Participants will have the opportunity to join fascinating sessions covering topics surrounding technology\, food\, environment and access plus a presentation by key-note speaker Mike Hardman\, University of Salford. \nThe event is part of the JPI Urban Europe funded project FEW-meter within the Sustainable Urban Global Initiative (SUGI) / Food-Water-Energy Nexus. \nRegister and learn more here. \n 
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/symposium-technology-and-green-spaces/
LOCATION:The Garden Room\, St Luke’s Community Centre\, 90 Central Street\, London\, EC1V 8AJ\, United Kingdom
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