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RESEARCH PRODUCT

The role of civil society organisations in European responsible research and innovation

Barbara GrimpeMarina JirotkaNigel GilbertBenjamin SchrempfPetra Ahrweiler

subject

Civil societyInformation Systems and ManagementResponsible Research and Innovationbusiness.industryStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectField (Bourdieu)05 social sciencesDistribution (economics)06 humanities and the artsPublic relations050905 science studies0603 philosophy ethics and religionSubject-matter expertWork (electrical)Management of Technology and InnovationPolitical scienceConviction060301 applied ethics0509 other social sciencesbusinessFunction (engineering)media_common

description

EC policy reveals a strong conviction that CSO’s main function in EU-funded research and innovation projects is to take care of the ‘societal perspective’, which would not be adequately represented otherwise. With this, CSOs are supposed to be the main advocates of RRI in project consortia and are supported by all kinds of EC policy measures to fulfil this role. This conviction is not only problematic due to definition problems concerning CSO as such. Empirical data about the role of CSOs in high-tech/high-innovation research projects and the distribution of RRI activities among consortia members reveal that the role of CSOs is much more multi-faceted (data providers, providers of access to the research field, providers of specific domain expertise etc.) than currently assumed. Furthermore, RRI policies of the EC have managed to sensitise all other actors in consortia to the societal perspective: universities and companies are likewise active to promote and realise RRI perspectives in project consortia with CSO not really standing out among them. These findings have at least two interesting implications: (1) CSOs have far more to offer than being just the ‘moral voice’ of society in research and innovation; their contribution is multi-faceted and beneficial in many respects. (2) The RRI policy of the EC is even more successful than expected: it is not just one actor type that is supposed to introduce RRI keys and elements in consortia; we can observe something like RRI diffusion among different types of consortia members with all of them active in supporting RRI perspectives in their research work.

10.1080/23299460.2018.1534508https://surrey.eprints-hosting.org/849974/