Jornada 2016 UB – LERU...academic staff. 55,000 non-academic staff + 12,000 PhD . degrees/year +...

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Jornada 2016 UB – LERU Sis anys a la LERU! 15 de Juliol de 2016

Transcript of Jornada 2016 UB – LERU...academic staff. 55,000 non-academic staff + 12,000 PhD . degrees/year +...

  • Jornada 2016 UB – LERUSis anys a la LERU!

    15 de Juliol de 2016

  • Amsterdam • Barcelona • Cambridge • Edinburgh • Freiburg • Genève • Heidelberg • Helsinki • Leiden • Leuven ICL (London) • UCL (London) • Lund • Milano • LMU München • Oxford • UPMC (Paris) • Paris-Sud • Strasbourg • Utrecht • Zürich

    An association of European research-intensive universities.

    Committed to the values of high quality teaching.

    Within an environment of internationally competitive

    research.

    Non-profit organisation, founded in 2002.

    What is LERU?

  • Some Facts and Figures of the LERU

    + 500,000 students

    + 50,000 PhD students

    55,000 academic staff

    55,000 non-academic staff

    + 12,000 PhD degrees/year

    + €300 M EU projects/year

    + €5 BN total research budget

    > 20% of ERC Grants

    + 55,000 MADegrees/year

    + 230 NobelPrizes & Field Medals

    + €1 billion is granted by research councils, while over €1.25 billion comes from contract research.

    Source: http://www.leru.org/index.php/public/about-leru/facts-and-figures/

  • Current members of the LERU

    21 members based in 10 European countries

    Membership only upon invitation

    Research-Intensive, Comprehensive

    UB became member in 2010

    Membership

  • Current members of the LERU

    Board of Directors, as of July 2016

  • LERU’s Commitment

    Encourage education through an awareness of the frontiers of human understanding.

    Foster the creation of new knowledge through basic research as the ultimate source of innovation in society.

    Promote research across a broad front, which creates a unique capacity to respond to new opportunities and problems.

    Commitment

  • LERU’s Purpose

    Influence policy at European Union (EU) and Member State (MS) level- EU (EC, EP, ECo, ERC, EIT, JRC, ERAC, ERIAB, etc.)- MS (prime ministers, ministers of research, ministers of

    finance) Develop best practices

    - Between 21 members- Institutional reflection, exchange of experience, collaborative

    actions Relevance for all Research-Intensive Universities

    - EU- Global

    Purpose

  • LERU’s Role as Lobby

    HORIZON 2020 ERA ERASMUS Plus

    RETHINKING EDUCATIONOPENING UP EDUATION

  • Organisation of the LERU

    Policy Committee

    Rectors’ Assembly

    Board of Directors LERU Office

    Communities Working Groups

    Expert Groups

    Until December 2016

  • OrganisationRectors’ Assembly

    Highest decision-making body of the League Each member represented by its head of institution Meets twice a year:

    May 2014 at the University of Helsinki November 2014 at the University of Milan May 2015 at the Université de Genève November 2015 at the Imperial College London May 2016 at the Utrecht University November 2016 at the University of Edinburgh

  • Organisation

    Board of Directors

    Implements decisions of the Rectors’ Assembly

    Monitors the budget

    Composition (as of July 2016):

    Alain Beretz (Chair), President of the University of Strasbourg

    Prof. Alice Gast, President of Imperial College London Prof. Bert van der Zwaan, Rector Magnificus of

    Utrecht University

  • Organisation

    Policy Committee (PC) Consists of rectors, vice-rectors and

    senior academic managers from LERU universities.

    Develops LERU research policy positions along a broad range of topics.

    6 members chaired by Professor David Price (UCL): UB, Edinburgh, Freiburg, Leiden, UCL, Milan, and Pierre & Marie Curie University.

  • Communities at the LERU

    10 Communities

    Representatives of all member universities

    Work on LERU policy or collaborative issues

    Operate on a continuous basis

    Led by a steering group with the support of a LERU Office member

  • Communities at the LERU

    UB members at 4 Steering Committees

    At present there are 10 LERU Communities:

    - Chief Information Officers- Directors of Communication- Doctoral Studies- Enterprise and Innovation- European Research Project Managers- Research Careers- Senior Officers Network- Social Sciences and Humanities- Vice-Rectors for Teaching and Learning- Vice-Rectors for Research

    Communities

  • Senior Officers’ Network Meetings (2014-2016)

    Topics:

    Stay on top of LERU’s past and upcoming activities and of recent research and higher education policy developments Coordination of the university’s participation in LERU activities

    Meetings held: 29/04/2014, Cambridge 8/10/2014, Leuven20-21/04/2015, Paris15-16/10/2015, Barcelona18-19/04/2016, Edinburgh

  • Working Groups at the LERU

    Address a specific topic

    Duration is limited in function of their remit

    Activities are led by a steering group, with the support of a LERU Officer

    8 WG at present: - Alumni- Charitable funding- Deans of Natural Sciences- Deans of Theology and Religious Studies- e-Learning- Gender- Law Deans - Ethics

    1 UB member at the Steering Committee

    8 Working Groups

  • Expert Groups at the LERU

    1 UB member at the Steering Committee

    Established with a limited task and for a limited time

    Provide expertise to an existing LERU representative body

    5/10 individuals from LERU universities

    Exceptionally non-LERU experts may be involved

    A chair is appointed and a LERU policy officer supports their activities.

    LERU Expert Groups:- Legal Expert Group- Ranking- Research Integrity- Animal used for Scientific Purposes

    4 Expert Groups

  • LERU Meetings

    Primary LERU tool

  • Nr of LERU Meetings held in 2013-2016

    28 UB attendances in 2013 36 UB attendances in 2014 37 UB attendances in 2015 20 UB attendances confirmed in 2016 + 10 more scheduled until Dec. 2016

    Participation of the at the LERU

    That is some 180 meetings in 7 years with UB participation

  • 2 Special LERU Meetings celebrats a la UB

  • 2 Special LERU Meetings celebrats a la UB

  • 12 Position Papers

    19 Advice Papers

    4 Briefing papers

    17 Notes

    ca. 60 Press Releases per year

    23 Other Publications as Statements

    specific answers to EC requests

    The Outcomes of the Communities, WG and EG: proactive LERU’s tools (2010-2016)

    +

    plus: Round Tables – Conferences - Communication tools (website, newsletter, etc)

  • http://www.leru.org/index.php/public/publications/

    LERU’s Recent Tools:2 exemples

  • http://www.leru.org/index.php/public/publications/

    LERU’s Recent Tools:2 more exemples

  • UB participation in other LERU Publications

    May 2014

    November 2014

  • March 2016September 2015

    UB participation in recent LERU Publications

  • 62 Press Releases in the 12 months

  • A LERU’s powerful tool: International collaboration and its lobby activity

    ERA Platform:

    EUA, Science Europe, EARTO, Nordforsk, CESAER (& IDEA League and EuroTech Universities Alliance)

    ESF, Vitae, SwissCore, CTWS, etc.

    Collaboration with other SHOs and Institutions

  • ERA-MoU between LERU and the EC

    Signed: July 2012 Survey filled: August 2013** HR Logo request (internal

    debate, survey, information,….) 2014 update of Open Access and Open

    Data policies June 23, 2015: LERU renewed its

    engagement regarding the European Research Area (ERA). The engagement is valid until the end of 2019.

  • International collaborations:

    Aiming at the creation of a Global Council of Research-Intensive Universities, LERU gradually intensifies its contacts with sister organisations worldwide.

  • The LERU Doctoral Summer School is an annual event organized by different LERU members.

    High interest for PhD Students: in the last 3 Calls (2014-2016), up to 84 UB PhD students have applied to be selected in a process that, in principle, allows 2 PhD candidates/LERU member to be accepted.

    From 2010 until 2016, 17 UB PhD Students have been selected by the LERU and the host University to attend the Doctoral Summer School.

    LERU Activities for Students

    Oxford, 2015

    Paris, 2013

    Barcelona, 2012

  • LERU Doctoral Summer School: an annual event organized by different LERUmembers. Its focus and format may differ depending on the institutions involved, but thegeneral ambition is to provide a learning experience of considerable and lasting addedvalue.

    LERU Activities for Students

    2016, Leiden: Data Stewardship for Scientific Discovery and Innovation.

    2015, Oxford: Sharing Excellence – The Value of Knowledge Exchange.

    2014, Helsinki: Doing the right things right - Research Integrity in a Complex Society.

    2013, UPMC-Paris: Development of leadership skills for employment in enterprise, government and academia.

    2012, UB: Beyond Open Access: Open Education, Open Data and Open Knowledge.

    2011, UCL-London: Essential Enterprise Skills for Early Career Researchers.

    2010, Amsterdam & Utrecht: Towards a sustainable future.

    Topics

  • Març-July 2015:

    Estudi sobre l’Impacte socioeconòmic de les Universitats de la LERU

    Other LERU Activities

  • Published, Sept. 2015:http://www.leru.org/index.php/public/news/investing-in-research-innovation-and-education-really-pays-off-/

  • Published, Sept. 2015:http://www.leru.org/index.php/public/news/investing-in-research-innovation-and-education-really-pays-off-/

  • Reforma actual de les estructures de la LERU.

    Aprovades a la Rectors’ Assembly de Maig de 2016

  • Governing Bodies:

    • RA – Rectors’ Assembly

    • BoD – Board of Directors

    PC – Policy Committee

    Communities:

    • CIO-C - Chief Information Officers

    • DoC - Directors of Communication

    • DSC - Doctoral Studies

    • EIC - Enterprise and Innovation

    • ERP - European Research Project Managers

    • RCC - Research Careers

    • SON - Senior Officers Network

    • SSH - Social Sciences and Humanities

    • VRLT - Vice-Rectors for Learning and Teaching

    • VRR – Vice-Rectors for Research

    Working Groups:

    • Alumni

    • Charitable Funding

    • DNS - Deans of Natural Sciences

    • TRS - Deans of Theology and Religious Studies

    • e-Learning

    • Ethics

    • Gender

    • Law Deans

    Expert Groups:

    • Animals (used for scientific purposes)

    • Legal Experts

    • Ranking

    • Research Integrity

    LERU groups from 2010 till 2016

    Current LERU Groups

  • The reform will create three categories of activity groups, in addition to the legally mandated governance groups (RA, BoD, LERU Office):

    - Policy groups, whose primary responsibility is to feed LERU's overall policy making,

    - Thematic groups, whose primary responsibility is to deliver expertise on specific topics related to their remit,

    - Network groups, whose primary responsibility is to optimisecommunication and information management inside and outside of LERU.

    Reform of LERU groups (approved at the Rectors’ Assembly of 21/05/2016)

    Reform of LERU Groups

  • (approved at the Rectors’ Assembly of 21/05/2016)

    Governing Bodies (unchanged):

    • RA – Rectors’ Assembly

    • BoD – Board of Directors

    BoD+ - Board of Directors and chairs of the nine policy groups

    Policy Groups

    • DOC – Doctoral Studies

    • ENT – Enterprise & Innovation

    • ERP – EU Research Projects

    • INF – Information & Open Access

    • LEA – Learning & Teaching

    • LIF – Life Sciences

    • NAT - Natural Sciences

    • RES – Research

    • SSH – Social Sciences & Humanities

    Thematic Groups

    • ALU - Alumni

    • ANI - Animals Used For Scientific Purposes

    • CAR - Research Careers & HR

    • CHA - Charitable Funding

    • CRI – Crime & Social Control

    • ELE - e-Learning

    • ETH - Ethics

    • GEN – Gender

    • INT - Research Integrity

    • LAW - Law

    • TRS - Theology & Religious Studies

    Network Groups

    • COM – Directors of Communication

    • SON – Senior Officers Network

    Reform of LERU Groups

  • Reform of LERU GroupsFunctional organigramme (approved at the Rectors’ Assembly of 21/05/2016)

  • Amsterdam • Barcelona • Cambridge • Edinburgh • Freiburg • Genève • Heidelberg • Helsinki • Leiden • Leuven ICL (London) • UCL (London) • Lund • Milano • LMU München • Oxford • UPMC (Paris) • Paris-Sud • Strasbourg • Utrecht • Zürich

    Gràcies!

    I que els propers anys siguin igual de profitosos (o més)!

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