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CRG coordinates ORION, a new European initiative to open up research to society

NewsNOTÍCIES

09
May
Dm, 09/05/2017 - 12:30

CRG coordinates ORION, a new European initiative to open up research to society

ORION is a new collaborative European project to explore ways in which research and funding organizations in life sciences and biomedicine can open up the way they fund, organize and do research. The Centre for Genomic Regulation (CRG) coordinates ORION and is one of the nine partners in the project. ORION kicks off in Barcelona this week.

Open science is a core strategy of the European Commission that involves widening participation and collaboration as well as sharing research processes and outcomes to improve research and innovation. All European Union members recognise the benefits of open science, but the transition to “openness” is challenging.   

Interesting challenges

The ORION project will help research and funding organizations to understand existing challenges in Open Science and implement institutional, cultural, and behavioral changes in how they carry out and manage research.

“New models of working require novel cooperative approaches that engage lots of different actors, such as researchers, funders, publishers, patient organisations, citizens, students, teachers, or companies,” explains Michela Bertero, coordinator of the ORION project and responsible for International and Scientific Affairs at the Centre for Genomic Regulation in Barcelona, Spain.

“It is often difficult to open up fundamental research in life sciences and biomedicine to different stakeholders, particularly citizens, so the ORION project will be both challenging and interesting,” she adds.

Co-creation in academia

At the heart of the project will be open “co-creation” experiments that engage multiple stakeholders and explore different ways to make scientific research more participatory and inclusive. The experiments will tackle questions such as: how can research organisations receive input from a multitude of stakeholders? How can research funding be made more inclusive? How can public dialogue inform research policy and research content? How can citizens be involved in fundamental research projects?

We will organize, for example, open dialogues with multiple actors on controversial research topics and launch innovative projects on fundamental research that entail participation of citizens and different experts. The results from the experiments will be developed into good practice and concrete actions that research and funding organisations can implement.

New ways of training and resources

ORION will also generate new training content for professionals working in funding agencies, to raise knowledge and awareness about Open Science and RRI, Responsible research and innovation. RRI is a concept helping organisations to incorporate the principles of ethics, gender, good governance, open access, public engagement, and science education in their policies, practices and processes. Focus will be on controversial research topics, e.g. animal research, genome editing, personalised medicine or stem cell research, and their medical applications.

Partners are committed to sharing lessons learnt and case studies with other organisations as well as developing a tailored action plan on Open Science and RRI for their own organisation. The project will result in a wide range of material, training, good practices, reports and publications that will be disseminated freely and widely across Europe.

“One of the CRG goals is to communicate science and establish a dialogue with society. Our expertise leading public engagement and science education programmes will be a valuable contribution to this project,” explains Gloria Lligadas, head of the CRG Communications and Public Relations department, who will co-coordinate ORION activities at the CRG. “Thanks to ORION we will have the opportunity to explore further and understand what society expects from fundamental research in life sciences, and to share and discuss these thoughts and needs with many different stakeholders,” she highlights.

ORION is the second European project that the CRG coordinates under the Science with and for Society Work Programme of the European Commission. “Leading not only European biomedical research projects but also science-and-society projects shows the maturity of our institute,” says Luis Serrano, CRG director. “We are committed to science excellence in its broadest meaning, by approaching other science-related aspects such as gender equality in academia through the LIBRA project (ADD LINK) and open dialogue with society by means of ORION,” he concludes.

ORION is a four-year project with a 3.2 million Euros budget funded under the European Commission’s Horizon 2020 programme. Partners in the consortium represent a mixture of expertise in fundamental research in life sciences and biomedicine, social sciences, funding, science communication, public engagement, and civil society. The project will be working closely with EU-LIFE, an alliance of top life science research institutes in 13 European countries.

 

About ORION (Open Responsible Research and Innovation to further Outstanding KNowledge)

 


ORION is a 4-year project that has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 741527. This project addresses the Horizon 2020 call for “SwafS-04-2016” under the Science with and for Society Work Programme.

Website: www.orion-openscience.eu (currently under construction)
Twitter: @ORION_OpenScien

Partners:

1.    Fundació Centre de Regulació Genòmica (CRG), Spain
2.    Masarykova  Univerzita (MU), Czech Republic
3.    The Babraham Institute (BI), UK
4.    Max-Delbruck-Centrum Fur Molekulare Medizin In Der Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft (MDC), Germany
5.    Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII), Spain
6.    Vetenskap & Allmänhet (VA), Sweden
7.    Universitat Autònoma de Brcelona (UAB), Spain
8.    Jihomoravske Centrum Pro Mezinarodni Mobilitu, Zajmove Sdruzeni Pravnickych Osob (JCMM), Czech Republic
9.    Fondazione ANT Italia Onlus (ANT), Italy

Associated partners:

1.    Building and Promoting Excellence in Life Science in Europe (EU-LIFE), Europe-wide
2.    Helmholtz Association (HA), Germany
3.    Biotechnology and Biological Science Research Council (BBSRC), UK
4.    Neuron Fund for Support of Science (NEURON), Czech Republic
5.    eLIFE (eLIFE), World-wide
6.    European Citizen Science Association (ECSA), Europe-wide
7.    BIOCAT (BIOCAT), Catalonia
8.    Foster Platform (FOSTER), Europe-wide

 

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