The ACCOMPLISSH project (Accelerate co-creation by setting up a multi-actor platform for impact from Social Sciences and Humanities) has created a platform for dialogue. This platform has been organized in such a way that academia, industry, governments and societal partners equally contribute in identifying barriers and enablers of co-creation. The results from both practice and the theory of co-creation form the basis of the valorisation concept.
Valorisation of knowledge in this respect means:
“The process of value-creation arising out of knowledge, by making this knowledge suitable and available for economic or societal utilisation and to translate this into high-potential products, services, processes or industrial activity.”
The valorisation concept has been tested in the project in a quadruple helix setting. Traditional valorisation approaches focus on linear processes: from academia to society. In order to bring valorisation to a higher level, all relevant actors needed to cooperate in an equal setting: co-creation. Co-creation transcends boundaries, but it does not happen naturally. Therefore, the ACCOMPLISSH consortium, consisting of 14 universities from 12 countries, has involved partners from the so called Quadruple Helix (industry, governments and societal partners) within the project. The ACCOMPLISSH project has identified barriers and enablers of co-creation.
Conclusions
During the project period we have:
1) analysed the concept of co-creation and concepts that belong to the same ‘family like valorization, social impact etc. ‘within policy discourses over the last twenty years;
2) further conceptualized the concepts on the basis of scientific literature
3) tested co-creation in practice.
The results of this analysis were twofold. On the one hand we published papers based on 1-3. Besides that, we have used the insights of this dialectical process to develop training courses and materials like guides and toolkits.
We actively developed our consortium and transformed it into a platform with members from academia, enterprises, governments and civil organizations. All of the stakeholders actively contributed on our platform and we expect that they will continue to do so in the future.
We are convinced that we have contributed to the changing ‘impact’ landscape in the European Union. Only 4 years ago, we were part of a discourse, that mainly talked about valorization, integration between SSH and STEM and science for society, but in the last few years we slowly transformed into a more co-creational type of discourse in which impact/social impact is the key and co-creation is seen as the way forward in the new Horizon Europe programme.