Conference: Horizons for Social Sciences and Humanities
The conference “Horizons for Social Sciences and Humanities”, initiated and organized by the EU Lithuanian Presidency is therefore timely. It invites elaboration of the potential that SSH can bring to the goals defined in “Horizon 2020” and how best to integrate the knowledge, methods and experience the SSH have to offer over a wide range of phenomena and problem spaces. The conference follows a bottom-up approach: Putting SSH researchers and scholars at the centre is intended to create an agora for open discussion on crucial questions, such as:
- What issues need to be addressed in Europe, and how can SSH contribute?
- Which structural requirements and preconditions determine a more effective outcome of SSH research under “Horizon 2020”, in particular at European level?
- How can SSH approaches be effectively embedded across the seven challenges in “Horizon 2020”?
and where appropriate, better links with the other two domains of the life sciences and physical sciences, based on the principle of working towards a shared problem definition and based on mutual respect?
Conference Topics
Day 1: Reflecting the status of SSH in Europe
The first day of the conference is dedicated to reflecting the status of SSH in Europe and the challenges ahead. Three keynote lectures will address key issues which affect all SSH disciplines and fields: Diversity and common grounds; training and education; impact and evaluation. Each keynote lecture will be commented by researchers from the younger generation and accompanied by a general discussion.
Day 2: Implementation of “Horizon 2020”
The greatest gambit under “Horizon 2020” and its most ambitious dimension is based on the idea to follow an integrative approach. This concerns mainly the third pillar of the programme, “Grand Challenges”. Within this framework, the social sciences and humanities have to be properly embedded: Certain topics such as migration, poverty, financial markets, health care and welfare system, will benefit particularly from a SSH perspective. Any programme dedicated to these issues needs to specifically acknowledge them. In addition, social sciences and humanities need to be present in the other challenges as well: progress needs to be made on membership in the programme committees and evaluation panels, but there are also challenges in cross-disciplinary research that await fresh perspectives.
Only if complementarity and integration of all concerned disciplines can be achieved, answers to the societal challenges will emerge. Based on the reflections of the first day, the major part of day two will be dedicated to parallel workgroups, one for each challenge. The workgroups will bring together and confront experts who are experienced and genuinely interested in finding novel forms of integrative collaboration. They will aim at identifying existing obstacles and ways of overcoming them and suggest concrete ways of how to move forward.
The Steering Committee: Helga Nowotny (chair), Rūta Petrauskaitė (vice chair), Giedrius Viliūnas (vice chair), Jutta Allmendinger, Paul Boyle, Craig Calhoun, Gustavo Cardoso, Rivka Feldhay, Poul Holm, Pavel Kabat, Alain Peyraube, Aura Reggiani, Peter Tindemans, Wim van den Doel, Michel Wieviorka, Björn Wittrock
The conference will take place at Mykolas Romeris University Vilnius, Lithuania.http://horizons.mruni.eu/