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X-WR-CALDESC:Events for JPI Urban Europe
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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Brussels:20200605T123000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Brussels:20200605T140000
DTSTAMP:20260415T171030
CREATED:20200506T080011Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200608T060609Z
UID:16161-1591360200-1591365600@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Urban Lunch Talk #13: Taking action on the resilience-robustness dilemma
DESCRIPTION:Is it time to move “beyond the smart city”- and what does that mean in practice? Does the “smart and resilient city” stand tall in various types of societal crisis? Listen to this talk and explore urban robustness together with guests from around Europe and across sectors!\n  \nPoint of departure:\n‘Urban areas and policy are challenged not just with resilience in a technical sense\, but with the robustness of their ethical value base around democracy and human rights by increasing turbulence and shifting grounds in terms of climate as well as societal dynamics. Whereas resilience de- notes the capacity to recover\, robustness focus on the sturdy and healthy ‘baseline’ of urban settings as a pre-condition for sustainability as well as for sound resilience in crisis-management.’ (SRIA 2.0\, p 22) \nFrom an urban planning perspective\, access to data and information is generally insufficient to plan cities effectively. Urban science can inform and support existing planning processes and that usually means partnerships between different stakeholders. Is smart replacing sustainability as the desired end goal or does smart facilitate the realisation of more sustainable cities? The idea of ”Moving beyond the smart cities” has been aired and interpreted in more contexts lately. For example in the spreading of “Baukultur”: the focus on human needs\, cultures and identities to establish a more livable environment for everyone. We also saw it in the Finish presidency to the EU: \n‘(…) the Finnish Presidency aims to go ‘beyond the smart city’\, re-focusing the perspective from a technology-dominated approach to a human-centric and more holistic approach to a digital city. (…)’  (See p. 4) \nAt the same time\, policy briefs and texts tend to refer to levels of action in terms of “city level”\, “national level” and “EU-level”. But what is the added value of also addressing the “neighbourhood-level” as point of action? This perspective has been aired by JPI Urban Europe before and also by the Leipzig Charter 2.0 that is under development. On this topic\, there are also voices pointing out matters of both participation and representation: “My fear is that smart cities end up benefiting the elite white men (…)” (Catherine D’Ignazio\, Massachusetts Institute of Technology). The ‘New Urban Science’ agenda is closely aligned with local development activities\, smart cities and digitalisation\, Agenda 2030 and integrated urban development. Is smart replacing sustainability as the desired end goal or does smart facilitate the realisation of more sustainable cities? \nMeet the guests:\n\nVeerle Labeeuw works for Circular Flanders with learning networks and as a partner in the Urban Agenda on Circular Economy. Together they created “www.circulargovernance.city” to guide cities into a governance without silos.\nVlad Mykhnenko works with the 3S RECIPE (Smart shrinkage solutions – Fostering resilient cities in inner peripheries of Europe) – a JPI Urban Europe supported project via the ERA-NET Smart Urban Futures call.\nKjell Borking works with the InSight & EnLIGHT project\, supported by the JPI Urban Europe Making Cities Work call. The project creates a digitalized and user-friendly workflow by integrating and adapting survey and decision analysis methods\n\nProgram (CEST)\n12.30: Project result presentation by Nasar Meer: PrincipaI Investigator for GLIMER and then Karin Snel from FLOODLABEL.\n13.00 The Urban Lunch Talk starts\n14.00 The Urban Lunch Talk ends\n14.15 Chat closes \nHost: Jonas Bylund\, Research- and Innovation Officer in JPI Urban Europe \nChat host: Caroline Wrangsten\, Assistant Project Manager in JPI Urban Europe \n> Listen to the recording\n> Read “Corona effects on urbanism – report from a policy paper shop-floor thread around urban public spaces” 
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/ult-13/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20200615
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20200617
DTSTAMP:20260415T171030
CREATED:20200205T093240Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200421T092549Z
UID:15468-1592179200-1592351999@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:SUGI Virtual Midterm Meeting (Invitation only)
DESCRIPTION:On June 15-16 the midterm meeting for the Sustainable Urbanisation Global Initiative (SUGI) Food-Water-Energy Nexus will be arranged via Zoom. \nIf you have any questions\, please conctact: \nKlara Broms Seving\nCommunication Officer\nKlara.Broms.Seving@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/sugi-midterm-meeting-invitation-only/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20200618T140000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Stockholm:20200618T170000
DTSTAMP:20260415T171030
CREATED:20200513T075652Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200623T101317Z
UID:16400-1592488800-1592499600@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Webinar: State of play in the Driving Urban Transitions Programme
DESCRIPTION:Welcome to an interactive webinar where we present the state of play of the Driving Urban Transitions Programme and the outcomes of the virtual AGORA where stakeholders process the outcomes of the public consultation in the program. \n>> Read the Final Draft Proposal of the Driving Urban Transitions Partnership here\n>> Download the Webinar Slides\n>> Watch the Webinar Recording\n  \nAll interested stakeholders are invited to join this webinar for information and reflection on the next programme of JPI Urban Europe. The webinar offers the opportunity to learn more about the results of recent stakeholder consultations and co-creation workshops\, and have a say on the draft implementation concept. \n \nBackground\n10 years after the inauguration of JPI Urban Europe\, we can look back at seven joint calls (three in cooperation with the European Commission) and more to come\, over 85 funded projects bringing together 450 project partners throughout Europe and the world\, an active AGORA community\, among other achievements. After 10 years\, it is the time for JPI Urban Europe to step up the game and increase efforts and activities to Drive Urban Transitions towards a Sustainable and Livable Future. We would like to invite you to join us into this next phase of the urban transitions journey. \nIt is time to step up the game to make these transformations a reality\, to benefit from all this knowledge and evidence and bring research and innovation into action. For that reason\, JPI Urban Europe is working together with the European Commission on a longer term programme called „Driving Urban Transitions towards a Sustainable and Livable Urban Future“. This programme aligns European and Member State’s efforts to build a critical mass for urban transitions.
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/webinar-dut/
LOCATION:Online
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20200624T123000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20200624T140000
DTSTAMP:20260415T171030
CREATED:20200506T114303Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200626T063100Z
UID:16170-1593001800-1593007200@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Urban Lunch Talk #14: Taking action on the public space dilemma
DESCRIPTION:Liveability\, placemaking and AI… should cities go “back to basics”? Practitioners and others working with public space experience dilemmas in decision making processes- which are they and how can you approach them? In this this travel-free event you meet guests from around Europe and across sectors. The event includes the pre-launch of an upcoming policy paper booklet by the JPI Urban Europe AGORA. Hear some of the writers in this event!\nListen to the recording here: \n\n\n\n\n\n\nYou are currently viewing a placeholder content from YouTube. To access the actual content\, click the button below. Please note that doing so will share data with third-party providers. \n More Information \n Unblock content Accept required service and unblock content \n \n \n\nSlides:\n\n> See the photos and slides from ProstoRož\, Ljubljana. \n> See the slides about the upcoming policy paper booklet from the JPI Urban Europe AGORA \n\nPoint of departure:\n“Inclusive public spaces for urban liveability” is one out of four dilemmas targeted in the SRIA 2.0: \n“(…) public spaces are constantly influenced by power balances and the needs of different groups and communities. A specific concern is how to cater for safety and security concerns without a widening of exclusive spaces. (…) Policies for enhancing city status and attractiveness does not always support urban liveability.” \nDilemmas around public space involves issues of inclusion and security\, mobility and morphology\, openess and integrity\, urban green and density\, physical environments and digitalised/augmeneted spaces\, digitalised public protection and control\, autonomous vehicles\, qualities of design\, green accessibility\, urban demographics\, and patters of privatisation. How can these dilemmas be approached in theory and practice? Is it about new types of innovation or about “going back to basics” in these types of decision making processes? \n–  How can city makers choose between equally desirable (or undesirable) options? \n–  Which policies can both enhance city attractiveness– and support urban liveability? \n  \nMeet the guests:\n\nDaniela Patti is an architect and urban planner with experience from both research and municipal organisations. She is the co-founder of Eutropian\, an organisation providing support with advocacy\, research and policy to support inclusive urban processes. They run various projects related to public space dilemmas\, such as “Open Heritage”\, “New Life to Markets”\, “Generative Commons” and Urbact Com.Unity.Lab: Network of European city administrations. Eutropian recently started a series of webinar with Cooperative City\, “in Quarantine” on how cities in Europe are reacting to the COVID-19 crisis\, also in partnership with the European program URBACT.\nRuth Yeoman is a Fellow at Kellogg College\, University of Oxford\, and an Associate Professor\, Business and Law\, Northumbria University. Ruth initiated The Meaningful City project – a model and a resource for policy innovation and novel organisational practices involving urban dwellers in creating positive meaning in their lives and work. You find a case study on “meaningful cities” here. Ruth has also worked with the JPI Urban Europe booklet of policy papers on public spaces that will be pre-launched at this event.\nAksel Ersoy is an Assistant Professor in Urban Development Management at Delft University of Technology\, Faculty of Architecture\, Department of Management in the Built Environment. He is interested in understanding the complex relationship between social and economic transformations taking place in developing economies\, metropolitan cities and the built environment. His research experience has benefitted from a combination of theories and approaches in the discipline of planning\, geography and beyond. Currently\, he works on the governance of ‘the smart city’\, urban resilience\, urban infrastructure and the circular economy.\nMatthijs Hisschemöller\, Senior Researcher & Lecturer at DRIFT for transition and project coordinator for SMART-U-GREEN – Governing conflicting perspectives on transformations in the urban rural continuum. Some transformations are desirable\, such as greener urban landscapes. Some are inevitable\, such as changing consumer habits affecting downtown shopping areas. Urban landscape transformations come with conflicts involving many actors. Bottom-up initiatives introduce new forms of urban landscape management.\n\nHost: Johannes Riegler\, Stakeholder Involvement Officer in JPI Urban Europe\nChat host: Caroline Wrangsten\, Assistant Project Manager\, JPI Urban Europe \nProgram (CEST):\n12.30 Intro + Pre-launch of the AGORA policy paper booklet\n12.40 “Warm-up” for the Urban Lunch Talk:\n– Presentation by Sandra Guinand\, Department of Geography and Regional Research at the University of Vienna.\n– Presentation by Zala Velkavrh from the organisation prostoRož in Ljubljana\, Slovenia.\n12.55 Questions or comments\n13.00 The Urban Lunch Talk starts with invited guests (see above). We mix polls\, discussions and QA with the participants.\n14.00 The Urban Lunch Talk ends.\n14.15 Chat closes. \n  \n> Join us on Slack for self-organised networking before and after the event \n> Read about the AGORA Dialogue in Riga 2019 (the starting point for the coming policy paper booklet)
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/ult-14/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20200630T133000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20200630T180000
DTSTAMP:20260415T171030
CREATED:20200616T105813Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20200715T083736Z
UID:16671-1593523800-1593540000@jpi-urbaneurope.eu
SUMMARY:Online Matchmaking Event: Positive Energy Districts and Neighbourhoods
DESCRIPTION:Positive Energy Districts and Neighbourhoods may serve as a crucial contribution to achieve climate and energy targets. This call focuses on exchange of experience between ambitions and initiatives already going on. \nOnline Matchmaking Event\nDuring the event on 30 June\, the call topics & procedure will be explained in more detail. At a Q&A session\, participants will have the opportunity to direct questions at the call secretariat and PED programme management. Furthermore\, best-practice examples from previous calls\, with a strong focus on stakeholder involvement\, will be presented. Participants are invited to present their project ideas and initiate a 1:1 exchange with other interested call applicants (see Agenda). \nRegister here!\nJoint Call for Proposals\nWith this call\, JPI Urban Europe aims to create a transdisciplinary and cross-sectoral community working in the field of the energy transition in the urban context\, who can align\, synthesise\, consolidate\, and learn from each other with regard to the development and mainstreaming of PEDs/PENs.\nParticipating countries: Austria\, Belgium (Brussels Capital Region)\, Czech Republic and Sweden\nCall opening: 20 April 2020\nProposal deadline: 24 September 2020\, 12:00 a.m. CEST\nTarget groups: • Companies • Consumers • Cities\, municipalities\, regions • Citizens’ representatives\, NGOs • Research organisations \nMore details regarding the PED Call\nas in call topics\, eligibility critera and national contact points \nMore details regarding the PED Programme\n 
URL:https://jpi-urbaneurope.eu/event-calendar/ped-call-online-matchmaking/
CATEGORIES:PED
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