What is the problem/issue being addressed?
Our societies currently are facing huge challenges, which are endangering democracies and even human life itself. Research and innovation provide tools to meet these challenges and to support change. Co-Change wants to inspire responsibility-oriented change in research performing and research funding organisations. Together, we are introducing new practices regarding research ethics, open access, open science, transparency, accountability, stakeholder engagement, science education, gender equality and sustainability.
Why is it important for society?
Innovations are changing our lives extremely quickly. If we take the example of the smartphone, which was presented to the public only in 2007, it is clear that during the last decade it has transformed the way we communicate, retrieve and share private and professional information, socialise, take pictures, use public transportation, stay in touch with friends abroad and many other acts of daily life. The smartphone can be understood as a bundle of innovations, the use of which has impacted our lives in many positive ways as mentioned above. However, these innovations also have negative consequences, for example, new psychological phenomena such as smartphone addiction. They have also enabled the rise of the platform economy, with powerful platforms such as Google, Amazon and Facebook, with associated dangers to privacy, since the business models of these firms are built on the private data extracted from their users through their services. Scientific researchers and research communities are expected by society to be responsive to these societal concerns and issues. Societal actors and citizens will gain greater trust in science if research performing and funding organisations and the entire research and innovation system readily address the societal challenges that citizens and their communities are struggling with.
What are the overall objectives?
- To initiate and implement institutional changes in the areas of the 5 European Commission RRI keys: Citizen Engagement, Gender Equality, Open Access, Research Ethics and Science Education
- To build change coalitions: by implementing the Co-Change Labs in their ecosystems, generate transformative capacity for change in terms of practices, procedures, rules and norms at the individual, organisational and system levels
- To co-create and test RRI-related practices for institutional change in research funding and performing organisations within consortium member organisations and associated partner organisations
- To make the impact of innovation on society a part of consortium member organisations’ daily routines
- To align both the project process and its outcomes with the values, needs and expectations of society to produce ethically acceptable, sustainable and socially desirable research and innovation outcomes and to assist the development of a socially, economically, ecologically and technologically more sustainable society