Business School launches new policy learning platform for sustainability goals
By: Tom Walters
Last updated: Tuesday, 14 March 2023
This week, researchers and professional services staff from the ßÏßÏÊÓƵ Business School launched a new web platform for policy learning, consolidating six years of co-production and deep engagement with innovation agencies on sustainability and transitions.
The new translates over 400 outputs from ßÏßÏÊÓƵ staff and partners in Africa, Asia, Europe and Latin America into a curated collection of multimedia learning materials and interactive tools.
For example, the tool uses theory to help identify spaces for intervention within, for example, a food, health or energy system; while the , was developed with the Latin American Hub to help funders and policy makers think about an initiative (such as a project, programme or policy) as a Transformative Innovation ‘experiment’. support the bridge between theory and practice.
Over 300 people registered for launch of the Lab from 53 countries. These included representatives from national research, innovation and development agencies in Austria, China, Colombia, Finland, Ghana, Kenya, Indonesia, the Netherlands and South Africa, alongside global research institutes, NGOs, and intergovernmental organisations including the European Commission, OECD, UNDP and UNECE.
In opening remarks, Imraan Patel, TIPC Board member and Deputy Director-General for Research Development and Support at South Africa’s Department for Science and Innovation, introduced the rationale for the Lab:
‘These theoretical concepts are important and require direct engagement with practitioners working in the policy sector, along with materials that can be used with a wider audience… The idea was to produce a dynamic set of resources that can grow as we do more policy experimentation in the next phase of TIPC.’
SPRU researchers Bipashyee Ghosh and Paloma Bernal Hernández shared insights into the theory behind the Lab and the process of co-creation with regional hubs.
Communications lead Geraldine Bloomfield later chaired a panel, in which coaches and users of the Lab reflected on how they were using the tools. Panellists Patience Mguni, Janaina Pamplona da Costa and Sandra Boni discussed how TIPC resources were helping work in Catalonia on local knowledge regions; in South Africa on water sensitive cities; in Brazil on health policy responses to Covid-19; in Colombia on regional science, technology and innovation systems; and in Sweden on transforming the food system.
‘The response to the platform shows how many governments around the world are grappling with the question of how to make projects, programmes and policies more transformative,’ said Victoria Shaw, Programme Director for TIPC. ‘The next steps for us are to strengthen the and , and to design a participatory learning programme that embeds this work deeper in policy practice.’
Eleven staff from the ßÏßÏÊÓƵ Business School have worked on the : Paloma Bernal Hernández; Geraldine Bloomfield; Pip Bolton; Francisco Dominguez; Bipashyee Ghosh; Christina Miariti; Claudia Obando Rodriguez; Andrea Padilla Cuevas; Victoria Shaw; Chandra Singgih Pitoyo; Ed Steinmueller; and Imogen Wade.