work package 1 1-7 presentation.pdfmanagement in horizon 2020”. task 3.2: identifying data and...
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Work Package 1 Management
and Practical Aspects
Task 1.1: Executive Management (UAB with support of all WP leaders) (M1-48). Task 1.2: Financial Management (UAB with support of all WP leaders) (M1-48). Task 1.3: Scientific Coordination Support (UAB with support of all WP leaders) (M1-48). Task 1.4: Coordination/Synergies with Relevant EU Projects and Other Initiatives (UAB with support of all WP leaders) (M1-48).
This WP is dedicated to the management and coordination of the activities of the project, including overall legal, scientific, financial and administrative issues. This includes: -Management, administrative and financial procedures; -Financial transactions at the consortium level; -Project progress and outputs; -kick-off and progress meetings, Advisory Board meetings, and General Assembly; -Technical and financial reporting.
Carefully plan your travel budget Other direct costs
• Certificate on the Financial Statement;
• Open access publications;
• Conferences & workshops (dissemination) (travel and registration);
• Scheduled project meetings;
• Scheduled training session;
• Ad-hoc task-force meetings.
Reporting Periods
Coordination will sollicit information for technical and financial reporting
More info available at: H2020 Online Manual & AMGA http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/amga/h2020-amga_en.pdf
Reporting Period Starting Month Ending Month Duration (M)
1 1 12 12
2 13 30 18
3 31 48 18
Yearly Progress Meetings
Any candidates to host the first progress meeting?
Progress meeting Month Date Observation
First 12 May 2017 Advisory Board Meeting
Second 24 May 2018
Third 36 May 2019 Advisory Board Meeting
Final 46 March 2020
More information on Management Structure:
Magic Consortium Agreement
Magic Grant Agreement (Annex1 DoA Part B)
http://felipsoriano.com/magic-nexus/documents/ (http://magic-nexus.eu/documents)
Task Force/Work
Package WP2 WP3 WP4 WP7
Communication and visibility
GIS
Science for
Policy Energy
Water
Agriculture/food
WP1
Data management: Ansel Renner; Communication and Visibility, Dissemination: Samuele Lo Piano; Synergies Plans: Violeta Cabello; GIS: Tarik Serrano; Gender Issues: Maddalena Ripa; Thematic:
Science for Policy: Zora Kova; Water: Violeta Cabello; Energy: Mario Giampietro; Agriculture and food: Tarik Serrano.
UAB Taskforces – first contact point/responsible
UAB Taskforces – contacts
Data management/WP3: [email protected] Communication and Visibility: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] GIS: [email protected]; Thematic: Science for Policy: [email protected], [email protected] Water: [email protected] , [email protected]
Energy: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]; Agriculture and food: [email protected], [email protected] Please do not forget always in cc: [email protected]
UAB – who to contact
Meetings: [email protected], [email protected] Advisory Board, General Assembly: [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Synergy Plan (with SIM4NEXUS & other projects): [email protected], [email protected], [email protected] Technical and financial reports/issues (deliverables): [email protected], [email protected] Minutes (milestones): [email protected], [email protected]
Contacts – netiquette
- Subject: [MAGIC]
- Dedicated WP/taskforce/issue: [ENERGY], [WP4], [MINUTES], etc.
Moving toward Adaptive Governance
In Complexity: informing NEXUS security
kick-off meeting
.: WP3 wrap-up :.
[email protected] [email protected]
ICTA 15 june
2016
MAGIC LOGO
(we have to
vote for)
WP3 objectives [M1— M48]
• This WP will design and implement applications of the
Nexus Information Space (NIS) capable of guaranteeing
the coherence over non-equivalent quantitative
representations of feasibility, viability and desirability of
socio-ecological systems in relation to the nexus across
different scales and different dimensions.
✧ SYSTEM: is the supporting technology that provides the data on
flow and fund, implements grammars (the expected relationships
between components of the system in a particular context).
✧ SPACE: handles the technical information system, the databases,
the GIS, the visualization, the info-graphics, and the video aspects
of MAGIC.
.
WP3 objectives [M1— M48]
• This WP will deal with technical aspects making it possible to
carry-out a quality check on the integrated representation
across scales associated with the chosen Quantitative Story
Telling.
• The WP3 will solve the problem of how to generate different
types of quantitative analysis (individuating relevant data and
combining chosen models) on the basis of the grammars
developed in WP4.
• Fundamental is the contribution of WP4 [M1-M12] leader
UAB with support of all partners, specifically the task 4.2:
Making grammars.
.
Which expertizes we can rely upon?
Twente
water footprint
water accounting
grammar
Bergen
post-normal science
data for governance
C.A.
carbon footprint
climate change
water availability
UniNA
statistics
ML & visualization
UAB
assembling nexus
MuSIASEM
ITC
data engineering
water/energy
JRC
Sensitivity and QST
participatory processes
Wageningen
food production
crops & livestock
Hutton
land use
geography & GIS
Work package number 3 Start Date or Starting Event M1 - M48
Work package title Nexus Information Space
Participant number 7 9 1 2 3 4 8
Short name of UNINA ITC UAB JHI WUR UT UiB
Person/months per participant: 48 32 18 4 14 24 2
STAD team @UniNA www.stad.unina.it/2016
STAD is “city” in Dutch.
[Statistics, technology, analysis of data] is a “research city” of University
of Naples Federico II in the flat world where a new "citizen" can
aggregate from almost anywhere.
This city contains a lot of "buildings" to create and work out ideas, provide
statistical science, transfer technology, analyze data with a meta-
disciplinary approach, "crossing the bridge" towards other scientific
communities.
tad
Massimo Aria
Antonio D’Ambrosio Roberta Siciliano Michele Staiano
@UniNA expertise being leader WP3
• Statistical learning, Data science, Big data,
Multidimensional Data Analysis, Visualization
• Decision-Support Systems under Total Quality
Management perspective
• Data edits, Data warehouse, Missing data
• Abstract and conceptualize models
tad
Tasks of WP3
Task 3.1: Data Management Plan (UNINA with support of ITC and
UAB) [M1-M6]
Define a Data Management Plan on the structured metadata repository
maintained by the consortium, the various methods of formalization used in the
different case studies proposed in WP4, WP5, WP6, and the management of the
data generated during the project, in accordance with the “Guidelines on Data
Management in Horizon 2020”.
Task 3.2: Identifying Data and Populating and Structuring
Databases (UNINA with support of ITC, UT, UAB, HUTTON, WU, UiB)
[M1-M48]
Identification of statistical, scientific and other databases at local, regional,
national and EU levels required for the chosen implementation of the NIS in the
various case studies and creation of a scheme for the deployment of a structured
metadata repository to be maintained by all partners in order to safely share the
data sources required to formalize the various grammars selected for the specific
assessments.
Tasks of WP3
Task 3.3 Supporting the Activities of WP4, 5 and 6 (UNINA with support
of ITC, UAB, HUTTON, WU, UT, UiB) [M6-M48]
Assisting the activities of WP4, WP5 and WP6 in the definition and integration of
different metrics, the integration of different analytical frameworks, the design and
integration of databases and visualization tools according to the chosen QST. The
experience accumulated during the project will be used to define a tool-kit making
it possible a quantitative characterization of different applications of the nexus
framework developed in WP4.
Task 3.4 Visualization (UNINA with support of ITC, UAB, HUTTON, WU,
UT, UiB) [M12-M48]
Development and testing of a system of integrated visualization of the quantitative
results about the feasibility, viability and desirability in the selected case studies to
be used for presenting the results of the project in the Nexus Dialogue Space
(WP2), and to be included in the Nexus Knowledge Hub (WP7).
UniNA
Cooperate to deliver such
tools...
ITC
Statistics
Statistical Learning within TQM
Plan Do
Check
Act
survey design data collection
data validation
imputation
data selection data transformation
data organization
pre-processing
method selection data processing
statistical analysis
dissemination
I when data are not
available and need
to be collected
II when data are
accessible and
need to be selected
III when datasets
are available and
need to be
processed
conceptual architecture
Nexus Information Space
Data sources Models
Support
ing t
echnolo
gie
s
Nexus Information System
Compiler
Visualisation
D3.1 Data Management Plan on the structured metadata repository
maintained by the consortium, the various methods of
formalization used in the different case studies proposed in
WP4, WP5, WP6, and the management of the data generated
during the project (M6)
D3.2 Report on visualization methods developed in the NIS (M42)
D3.3 Report on the datasets and tools used to support the
applications of Quantitative Story Telling (M48)
MS15 Data Repository Responsible: 7 – UNINA month 12
Basic data repository to support the applications of WP4,5, and 6 for
use by all consortium members. To be in place by month 12, and then
gradually expanded during the course of the project
Deliverables & Milestones
WP3 specific activities we are in charge of:
Compilation and catalogue of existing databases: we are
hiring two junior researcher (one dedicated to data
sources and one to models and their surrogates)
NIS relational structuring: we will structure metadata
and schemata for integration of sources (e.g. CIM★)
Visualization and coordination with web platform:
past experience and sub-contracting the last year.
Develop adapters with the tight collaboration of ITC:
we already started to cooperate (active exchanges).
Action plan
Z O R A K O V A C I C , T A R I K S E R R A N O
WORK PACKAGE 4
WP3 NEXUS Information Space
NEXUS Dialogue Space
WP4
Defining the
Quantitative
Story-Telling
WP2
EU
administration WP1
interactions
during the
project
permanent
platform of
interaction
WP7
NEXUS
Knowledge
Hub Quality check on the
assessment of innovations WP6
Quality check on the
robustness of narratives WP5
CASE STUDIES
QUANTITATIVE STORY-TELLING FOR GOVERNANCE
• Problems of evidence based policy:
• Over-simplification
• Dealing with complexity
OVERSIMPLIFICATION
“Based on historical trends, our projections show that population
numbers should keep increasing: we look to the upcoming Thanksgiving
with confidence…”
GDP WILL RESUME GROWTH IN 2009
European Commission, Economic Forecast, autumn 2007.
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs,
European Economy, No. 7/2007
GDP WILL RESUME GROWTH IN 2010
European Commission, Economic Forecast, autumn 2008.
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs,
European Economy, No. 6/2008
GDP WILL RESUME GROWTH IN 2011
European Commission, Economic Forecast, autumn 2009.
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs,
European Economy, No. 10/2009
GDP WILL RESUME GROWTH IN 2012
European Commission, Economic Forecast, autumn 2010.
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs,
European Economy, No. 7/2010
GDP WILL RESUME GROWTH IN 2013
European Commission, Economic Forecast, autumn 2011.
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs,
European Economy, No. 6/2011
GDP WILL RESUME GROWTH IN 2014
European Commission, Economic Forecast, autumn 2013.
Directorate-General for Economic and Financial Affairs,
European Economy, No. 7/2013
EU (28 countries) Eurostat EC Forecast, abs
average error
2.4 pts (140%)
2009 -4.8 2.4 error=7.2
2010 1.7 1 error=0.7
2011 1.4 1.5 error=0.1
2012 -0.7 2 error=2.7
2013 -0.1 1.5 error=1.6
Euro Area (18
countries)
Eurostat EC Forecast,
abs.
average error
2.5 pts (170%)
2009 -4.8 2.1 error=6.9
2010 1.7 1 error=0.7
2011 1.3 1.5 error=0.2
2012 -0.9 2 error=1.1
2013 -0.6 1.4 error=2.0
Eurostat http://epp.eurostat.ec.europa.eu/tgm/table.do?tab=table&plugin=1&language=en&pcode=tsdec100
FORECASTS HAVE A MEAN REVERTING CORE
COMPLEXITY
Multi-scale analysis
Event: THE DEATH OF A PARTICULAR INDIVIDUAL
EXPLANATION 1 --> “no oxygen supply in the brain”
Space-time scale: VERY SMALL Example: EMERGENCY ROOM
Implications for action: APPLY KNOWN PROCEDURES
Based on known HOW - past affecting strongly present actions
EXPLANATION 2 --> “affected by lung cancer”
Space-time scale: SMALL Example: MEDICAL TREATMENT
Implications for action: KNOWN PROCEDURES & EXPERIMENTATION
Looking for a better HOW - past affecting present, but room for change
EXPLANATION 3 --> “individual was a heavy smoker”
Space-time scale: MEDIUM Example: MEETING AT HEALTH MINISTRY
Implications for action: MIX EXPERIENCE AND WANTS INTO POLICY
Considering HOW and WHY - past and “virtual future” affecting present
EXPLANATION 4 --> “humans must die”
Space-time scale: VERY LARGE Example: SUSTAINABILITY ISSUES
Implications for action: DEALING WITH THE TRAGEDY OF CHANGE
Considering WHY - “virtual future” (values) affecting present
pre-analytical definition
of what should be analyzed
car
airplane
boat
truck
bike
horse
WHAT
tank
Economic
Criterion
Safety
Criterion
Cultural
Criterion
Driving quality
Criterion
SEMANTIC FRAMING OF THE ANALYSIS
WHY
moving people
on land
moving people
on water
moving people
short distance
moving people
long distance
moving around
when at war
moving heavy
loads
GOALS
+
CONTEXT
Economic
Criterion Safety
Criterion
Cultural
Criterion
Driving quality
Criterion
Can we use the same multi-criteria space
to characterize the choice between
a TRABANT and a FERRARI?
NO WAY!
It does not provide enough information to either
those interested in buying a TRABANT, nor
those interested in buying a FERRARI
The two types of buyer will requires a different
selection of indicators and attributes: a different WHAT
(18 October 1919 – 28 March 2013)
George Box
Box, G. E. P., and Draper, N. R.,
(1987), Empirical Model Building and
Response Surfaces, John Wiley & Sons,
New York, NY. P 424
“Essentially, all models are
wrong, but some are useful.”
decoding
Non-equivalent Perceptions
encoding
Non-equivalent Representations
ecologist
economist
biologist
engineer
sociologist
“SYSTEM”
Plurality of Observations
relevant
attributes
models
PLURALISM
19
ROSEN’S MODELLING RELATION
Narrative
NEW NARRATIVES
What makes a model useful?
Who defines the purpose?
GDP was created during WWII in order to measure
productive capacity to face the war – is this model
still useful to assess economic performance?
QUANTITATIVE CHECK OF THE USEFULNESS OF NARRATIVES
• A different way of doing science
• Using quantitative methods to check the usefulness
of narratives
• Quantitative tools are used as heuristic tools
• Beware of spurious quantification
TET
GDP
$
MJ
El Salvador = 12.6 MJ/$
Finland = 12.6 MJ/$
=
TET
THA
GDP
THA
Year 1997
MJ
US$ = 12.6 !!!
No significance !
No external referent !
Finland = 29.73 MJ/hr
El Salvador = 2.92 MJ/hr
Finland = 2.35 $/hr El Salvador = 0.23 $/hr
(20,600 $/year p.c) (2,020 $/year p.c)
ELPPW level n-1
ELPAG
ELPPS
ELPSG
14 $/hour 27 $/hour
31 $/hour
2 $/hour
0.8 $/hour
5 $/hour
HAAG HASG
HAPS
DEALING WITH UNCERTAINTY
Technical know-how ≠ Large scale application
• Grammars
• Semantic description of the interaction of elements in the system
• Metabolic patterns
• levels of consumption in extensive and intensive variables
• Domestic production vs imports/exports in flows/hour and
flows/ha
WHAT TYPE OF QUANTIFICATION?
DAY 2 – WP4
HOW WP4 WORKS
1. Training
2. Development of analytical tools
3. Analysis of 8-10 EU countries
4. Global drivers
5. Planetary boundaries
6. Externalization
7. Interaction with EC
8. Updating Grammars
Case studies WP5 Case studies WP6
WP4 TASKS
1. Training
(UAB with support of all other partners)
MuSIASEM Internal Project Training Session
• Month 4: 5-9 September 2016
• MILESTONE 1
Alternatively
Liphe4 Summer School
in 11-15 July !!!
WP4 TASKS
2. Development of analytical tools
(UAB with support of HUTTON, WU, UT, UiB,
UNINA, CA, ITC)
Definition of a general framework for the
quantitative analysis of the nexus based on
“grammars”
• Months 1 to 12
• DELIVERABLE 4.1
WP4 TASKS
3. State of the Play of 8-10 EU countries
(WU with support of UAB, HUTTON, UT, UiB, UNINA, CA,
ITC)
Develop a protocol for the characterization the
whole EU with a granularity of NUTS1 or NUTS 2 regions
• Months 9 to 18 -> DELIVERABLE 4.2
8-10 EU countries NUTS 1 NUTS 2
WP4 TASKS
Deliverable 4.3
4.3
Global Drivers
4.4
Planetary Boundaries
4.5 Externalization
Deliverable led by University of Twente
WP4 TASKS
4. Global Drivers
(UAB with support of WU, HUTTON, UT, UNINA, CA, ITC)
Generate simulations of the effect of existing drivers
on global metabolic patterns in the future for food,
water and energy requirements
• Months 9 to 18
WP4 TASKS
5. Planetary Boundaries
(WU with support of UAB, HUTTON, UT, UNINA, CA, ITC)
DPSIR of different types of SES in the world to check
the limits to the expansion of societal consumption
determined by external constraints
• Months 9 to 18
WP4 TASKS
6. Externalization
(UT with support of UAB, HUTTON, WU, UNINA, CA, ITC)
Effects of EU externalization of impacts to other SES
because of imports
• water footprint for embodied water
• ghost land for agricultural production
• stock depletion and GHG emissions associated with
imported energy
• Months 9 to 18
WP4 TASKS
7. Interaction with EC
(UAB and JRC with support of all other partners)
Interactive Meeting with EU Staff (from Policy and Innovation Teams)
This meeting will lead to the selection of case studies of WP 5 and WP6
• Month 18
• Milestone 2!
WP4 TASKS
8. Updating Grammars
(UAB with all other partners)
Revisions and updating of the developed analytical
frameworks in task 4.2 in response to the feed-backs
received from the case studies in WP5 and WP6.
• Months 21 to 48
WP4 PERSONS/MONTHS
Partner number WP4 effort
1- UAB 48
2- HUTTON 4
3 – WU 24
4 – UT 24
5 – UiB 2
6 – JRC 4
7 – UNINA 10
8 – CA 18
9 – ITC 3
total 137
Z O R A K O V A C I C , T A R I K S E R R A N O
WORK PACKAGE 4
WP3 NEXUS Information Space
NEXUS Dialogue Space
WP4
Defining the
Quantitative
Story-Telling
WP2
EU
administration WP1
interactions
during the
project
permanent
platform of
interaction
WP7
NEXUS
Knowledge
Hub Quality check on the
assessment of innovations WP6
Quality check on the
robustness of narratives WP5
CASE STUDIES
HOW WP4 WORKS
1. Training
2. Development of analytical tools
3. Analysis of 8-10 EU countries
4. Global drivers
5. Planetary boundaries
6. Externalization
7. Interaction with EC
8. Updating Grammars
Case studies WP5 Case studies WP6
WP4 TASKS
1. Training
(UAB with support of all other partners)
MuSIASEM Internal Project Training Session
• Month 4: 5-9 September 2016
• MILESTONE 1
Alternatively
Liphe4 Summer School
in 11-15 July !!!
WP4 TASKS
2. Development of analytical tools
(UAB with support of HUTTON, WU, UT, UiB,
UNINA, CA, ITC)
Definition of a general framework for the
quantitative analysis of the nexus based on
“grammars”
• Months 1 to 12
• DELIVERABLE 4.1
WP4 TASKS
3. State of the Play of 8-10 EU countries
(WU with support of UAB, HUTTON, UT, UiB, UNINA, CA,
ITC)
Develop a protocol for the characterization the
whole EU with a granularity of NUTS1 or NUTS 2 regions
• Months 9 to 18 -> DELIVERABLE 4.2
8-10 EU countries NUTS 1 NUTS 2
WP4 TASKS
Deliverable 4.3
4.3
Global Drivers
4.4
Planetary Boundaries
4.5 Externalization
Deliverable led by University of Twente
WP4 TASKS
4. Global Drivers
(UAB with support of WU, HUTTON, UT, UNINA, CA, ITC)
Generate simulations of the effect of existing drivers
on global metabolic patterns in the future for food,
water and energy requirements
• Months 9 to 18
WP4 TASKS
5. Planetary Boundaries
(WU with support of UAB, HUTTON, UT, UNINA, CA, ITC)
DPSIR of different types of SES in the world to check
the limits to the expansion of societal consumption
determined by external constraints
• Months 9 to 18
WP4 TASKS
6. Externalization
(UT with support of UAB, HUTTON, WU, UNINA, CA, ITC)
Effects of EU externalization of impacts to other SES
because of imports
• water footprint for embodied water
• ghost land for agricultural production
• stock depletion and GHG emissions associated with
imported energy
• Months 9 to 18
WP4 TASKS
7. Interaction with EC
(UAB and JRC with support of all other partners)
Interactive Meeting with EU Staff (from Policy and Innovation Teams)
This meeting will lead to the selection of case studies of WP 5 and WP6
• Month 18
• Milestone 2!
WP4 TASKS
8. Updating Grammars
(UAB with all other partners)
Revisions and updating of the developed analytical
frameworks in task 4.2 in response to the feed-backs
received from the case studies in WP5 and WP6.
• Months 21 to 48
• Deliverable 4.4
WP4 PERSONS/MONTHS
Partner number WP4 effort
1- UAB 48
2- HUTTON 4
3 – WU 24
4 – UT 24
5 – UiB 2
6 – JRC 4
7 – UNINA 10
8 – CA 18
9 – ITC 3
total 137
Workpages 5 & 6 (James Hutton Institute, Wageningen University)
Preliminary – dependent on WP2-4
Ideas at this stage
Workpages 5 & 6 (James Hutton Institute, Wageningen University)
Aim
WP5: quality check on the narratives behind policy
WP6: quality check on the potential of innovations
Using framework developed in WP2-4:
for real with stakeholders
Steps
WP5
1. Identify narratives behind directives
2. Interdependency among narratives - deliberating - MuSIASEM
3. Alternative narratives
WP6
1. Identify narrative of innovations
2. Discuss the potential - deliberating - MuSIASEM
3. Conclude potential
Workpage 5
Workpage 6
• What are the narratives within these policies, behind innovations? Nexus expressed?
• What are the aims of these stories and narratives?
• Use MUSIASEM to show why and where there are inconsistencies in these narratives.
• Bring in institutional analyses to show why such narratives persist (avoid information deficit approach)
WP5 & WP6
WP5 & WP6
• What are the policy/innovation windows that we are seeking to influence in our areas in the DoW
• 5 teams looking at the individual policies / and 5 at innovation. Who are in these teams.
• Content analysis and checking what they currently do (policy as designed and policy as enacted or current) via interviews of key participants.
• Opening up/closing down
Work Package 7
Nexus Knowledge Hub
WP3 NEXUS Information Space
NEXUS Dialogue Space
WP4
Defining the
Quantitative
Story-Telling
WP2
EU
administration WP1
interactions
during the
project
permanent
platform of
interaction
WP7
NEXUS
Knowledge
Hub Quality check on the
assessment of innovations WP6
Quality check on the
robustness of narratives WP5
CASE STUDIES
Knowledge Exchange
• Challenge the uni-directional approach of “informing citizens” or “creating awareness”
• Maximize impact by creating the opportunity for socially mediated modes of knowledge production
Post-Normal Science
Funtowicz & Ravetz 1993
Citizen engagement
• Identification of relevant narratives
• Critical assessment of current narratives
• Collaborative definition of new narratives
• Interactive tools:
– On-line forum
– Helpdesk for enquires
– Social media accounts (twitter & facebook)
Reusable Datasets
Research Partners
Direct Stakeholder
Advisers
Public
Interest Groups
Instrumental ChangeConceptual
ChangeAttitudinal Change (mainly
willingness to engage)Enduring Connectivity Increased Capacity
Transdisciplinary Research Methods (e.g. QST)
Inputs to Policy ProcessesScience-Policy Seminars Mixed Team
Making Process
Awareness
Social Media
Debates
Hotline/Helpdesk
Project Website
NewslettersLeaflets etc
Training/CPD
Print Media
Broadcast Media
Peer Review Publication
Project Steering Group
Webinars
Online Learning Materials
FAQ
Forum
KE Outcome
KE Audience
Popular ScienceBook
Guidance
Software Tools
Conference/Session
A visual representation of the components of the MAGIC knowledge exchange, dissemination and exploitation plan
Citizen Engagement
Plurality of interfaces * The Nexus Times
* Videos, Material, FAQs
* Social media
* Discussion forums
* Nexus hotline
* Publications
* Conferences
* Routledge Book series
* Text book on Nexus
* Educational games
* MOOCs
* Syllabi + materials
* Summer schools
* Specific Training
* Continuing Professional
Development course
* Ad-hoc tool-kits
Decision support for
a better informed
societal deliberation
A permanent contact point
with the society
Tasks
1. Dissemination Plan (M1-6)
2. Nexus Knowledge Hub (M1 – M48)
3. Scientific output (M12 – M48)
4. Other dissemination (M24 – 48)
5. Final conference (M47)
1. Dissemination Plan
(UAB, JRC, UiB)
Defining a Strategy for Dissemination, Communication, and Exploitation Identification of (i) target recipients, (ii) the communication strategy (frequency of communication,
newsletter, science policy seminars, public seminars), (iii) language (teaching material, professional training, scientific report)
Ideas & suggestions?
• Deliverable 7.7 Dissemination Plan (M 6)
2. Knowledge Hub
(UAB, UNINA and all)
Online platform
Within or linked to the project website
Related to Dialogued Space WP2
Dedicated PhD student at JRC
• Deliverables 7.1 Nexus Times (M 12) 7.2 Website (M 3) 7.5 Educational Nexus Game (M 42) 7.8 Leaflet (M 3)
• Dissemination of results & case studies
• Discussion forum on narratives & QST
• Videos, webinars, teaching material
2. Knowledge Hub
(UAB, UNINA and all)
Ideas & suggestions? How can we make this truly interactive?
Twitter and facebook
Hashtags? #MAGICNEXUS #NEXUS
https://www.facebook.com/MagicNexusEu
https://twitter.com/MAGIC_NEXUS
@MAGIC_NEXUS
3. Scientific output
(UAB and all)
Conferences & Publications
Obligation to publish in Open Access (manuscripts, data and bibliographic metadata)
Book in the series Routledge Explorations in Sustainability and Governance
• Deliverable 7.4 Report on publications & conferences (M 48)
Other dissemination
(UAB and all)
Teaching and training material on Nexus Assessment
Training and Continuing Professional Development course MOOC in Coursera • Videos, training and other material in the knowledge hub
• Book for the general audience
• Deliverable 7.3 TCPD course – teaching material (M 26)
5 Final conference
(UAB and all)
• Deliverable 7.3 Report on Final Conference (M 47)
Person-months
UAB 38.00
HUTTON 12.00
WU 14.00
UT 15.00
UiB 3.00
JRC 10.00
UNINA 9.00
CA 15.00
ITC 4.00
120.00
Person Months
Important for publications!!
Obligation to publish in Open Access (Publications, Data and Bibliographic metadata). Article 29 of the GA: 1 – upload final manuscript accepted for publication (pre-printed version?) in a repository for scientific publications (Knowledge Hub, Research Gate and Academia, …) 2 – ensure open access to the deposited publication — via the repository — at the latest: (i) on publication, if an electronic version is available for free via the
publisher, or (ii) within 6 months of publication (12 months for the social sciences and humanities) in any other case.
(a) deposit in a research data repository and take measures to make it possible for third parties to access, mine, exploit, reproduce and disseminate — free of charge for any user — the following: (i) the data, including associated metadata, needed to validate the results presented in scientific publications as soon as possible; (ii) other data, including associated metadata, as specified and within the deadlines laid down in the 'data management plan' (see Annex 1); (b) provide information — via the repository — about tools and instruments at the disposal of the beneficiaries and necessary for validating the results (and — where possible — provide the tools and instruments themselves).
Important for publications!!
EU GuidelinesGuidelines on Open Access to Scientific Publications and Research Data in Horizon 2020 http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/grants_manual/hi/oa_pilot/h2020-hi-oa-pilot-guide_en.pdf Related cost are eligible and go under "other direct costs"
Important for publications!!
Obligation to acknowledge EU funding and put disclaimer in any form of dissemination
Article 29.4 and 29.5 of the GA. Unless the Agency requests or agrees otherwise or unless it is impossible, any dissemination of results (in any form, including electronic) must: (a) display the EU emblem and (b) include the following text: “This project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 689669”. Any dissemination of results must indicate that it reflects only the author's view and that the Agency is not responsible for any use that may be made of the information it contains.
Obligation to inform other partners about the intention to publish/present results
Article 29.1 of the GA A beneficiary that intends to disseminate its results must give advance notice to the other beneficiaries of — unless agreed otherwise — at least 45 days, together with sufficient information on the results it will disseminate. Any other beneficiary may object within — unless agreed otherwise — 30 days of receiving notification, if it can show that its legitimate interests in relation to the results or background would be significantly harmed. In such cases, the dissemination may not take place unless appropriate steps are taken to safeguard these legitimate interests.
Article 8.3 Dissemination of the CA Prior notice of any planned publication shall be given to the other Parties at least 45 calendar days before the publication. Any objection to the planned publication shall be made in accordance with the Grant Agreement in writing to the Coordinator and to the Party or Parties proposing the dissemination within 30 calendar days after receipt of the notice. If no objection is made within the time limit stated above, the publication is permitted
General communication guidelines Horizon 2020 Guide "Communicating EU research and innovation guidance for project participants: http://ec.europa.eu/research/participants/data/ref/h2020/other/gm/h2020-guide-comm_en.pdf See also Article 38 of the GA.
Silvio’s corner – Post-Normal Twitting
The sobering wisdom of Vaclav Smil
Skeptical Energetics – Charlie Hall
Climatic Monitoring – by C.A.
Water level logger – by ?
Andrea’s corner – evidence based or policy based?
THESE ARE JUST IDEAS . . . To be discussed
Fracking observer – by Cristina Madrid (Yale)
We need a
“The Nexus Time
Task Force”!