Difference between revisions of "Sheba"

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(submission instructions)
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Shortly describe the challenge your team is about to solve (max 200-250 characters with spaces):
 
Shortly describe the challenge your team is about to solve (max 200-250 characters with spaces):
* We will improve evidence-based decision support for the governance of Baltic Sea sustainability. The results are useful for other sea areas, and the methods developed and tested are useful in supporting complex decision situations in general.
+
* We will improve evidence-based decision support for the governance of Baltic Sea sustainability. The results are useful for other sea areas, and the methods developed and tested produce shared understanding and support complex decision situations.
 +
 
 +
== Submission ==
 +
 
 +
We are meeting at a time of immense challenges to sustainable development. United Nations has introduced the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development to change our world. The objective of the Agenda is to build a better future for all of us. These goals are universal and belong to us all: countries, cities, companies, schools, you and me. This is our common agenda.
 +
 
 +
To solve grand challenges we need multidisciplinary approaches, broad-minded thinking and bold boundary crossings. The science based competition and idea accelerator, Helsinki Challenge, is a platform for collaboration: science and arts communities, business, decision makers, public sector and other actors of the society – we all need to join the movement to make the goals for sustainable development reality. Through the Helsinki Challenge collaboration we can create solutions for grand challenges and for the future well-being – together!
 +
 
 +
Helsinki Challenge 2016-2017 themes are: Sustainable Planet, People in Change and Urban Future. For more information kindly check challenge.helsinki.fi
 +
 
 +
Kindly submit the competition entry by November 15th, 2016.
 +
 
 +
Criteria
 +
 
 +
Helsinki Challenge competition entries will be evaluated through the following criteria
 +
 
 +
;Science-based
 +
As a science-based competition, all of the Helsinki Challenge teams need to have a firm link with academic work and practices. Ideally, the solution and the team are founded on a firm research-base (i.e. the team’s work is based on their own research), and the solution provides academic research with new insights and as such, feeds back to academia.
 +
 
 +
;Impact
 +
Impact is the main driving force of Helsinki Challenge: both the teams and the university are trying to find new ways of maximising the impact of research through the process. Impact is essentially about sustainable change: how to measure it and evaluate the team’s progression towards a better society. It can be measured both by the scale or the depth of the change the team is aspiring towards.
 +
 
 +
;Solution-focused
 +
Ultimately, solution is a medium for achieving impact. By this definition the successful Helsinki Challenge teams must be passionately aimed at building their solution and ways to achieve results effectively. The solution must be feasible, although it can be research-focused and abstract.
 +
 
 +
;Creativity
 +
The team’s ability to reframe the problem in new ways, to connect new partnerships and collaborations in new unforeseen contexts and finding new approaches for solutionizing are categories through which the jury can measure the team’s creativity.
 +
 
 +
;Originality
 +
Originality of the solution requires understanding of past and current iterations. This demands benchmarking. Originality can be measured by asking how and why the new solution excels existing solutions.
 +
 
 +
 
 +
'''Describe the Challenge
 +
 
 +
Choose the theme *
 +
* Sustainable Planet
 +
* Urban Future
 +
* People in Change
 +
 
 +
:''Shortly describe the challenge your team is about to solve. Explicate also your team’s proposed solution to the challenge, the scientific methods to be employed, and any multidisciplinary collaboration the project involves. Justify the challenge by showing why it is an important challenge for science and society, and how your team’s solution is unique and innovative one. (max 2500 characters with spaces) *
 +
 
 +
'''Collaboration and Impact
 +
 
 +
:''Shortly describe the project’s intended collaboration inside and outside the academia. Firstly, explain the working of the team and its division of responsibilities, and depict also any scientific collaboration inside your host institution as well as between your team and other higher education institutions. Secondly, describe how the project interacts with the society, and represent any actual or planned cooperation with companies, the public and the third sector, and the general public. Justify your alleged solution by showing how it would change the world. Lastly, describe the funding plan of the project, list actual and planned funding resources, and explain your plans for using the prize money.(max 2500 characters with spaces) *
 +
 
 +
'''Science
 +
 
 +
:''All entries in the Helsinki Challenge competition should represent solid science. Describe your and the team’s most significant scientific achievements, and how they relate to the current Helsinki Challenge project. (max 2500 characters with spaces)
 +
 
 +
'''Introduce the team
 +
 
 +
:''Team leader (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail) *
 +
 
 +
:''Contact person (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail) *
 +
 
 +
:''Team member responsible for communication (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail) *
 +
 
 +
:''Other team members (name, title, organization, e-mail) *

Revision as of 11:47, 31 October 2016

Sheba (SHarEd understanding about sustainable BAltic Sea governance) is a research application to Helsinki Challenge 2016.

Registration

This is the information asked and provided for the registration phase.

Team leader (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail):

  • Jouni Tuomisto, National Institute for Health and Welfare, +358295246305 jouni tuomisto thl fi

Contact person (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail) *

  • Jouni Tuomisto, National Institute for Health and Welfare, +358295246305 jouni tuomisto thl fi

Other team members (name, title, organization, e-mail) *

  • Päivi Haapasaari, Universty of Helsinki, paivi haapasaari helsinki fi
  • Sakari Kuikka, University of Helsinki, sakari kuikka helsinki fi
  • Arja Asikainen, National Institute for Health and Welfare, arja asikainen thl fi

Helsinki Challenge creates solutions to grand challenges and for the future well being. More info about the competition themes can be found [1]

Choose the theme

  • Sustainable Planet # : Yes --Jouni (talk) 07:24, 27 October 2016 (UTC)
  • Urban Future # : No --Jouni (talk) 07:24, 27 October 2016 (UTC)
  • People in Change # : Yes --Jouni (talk) 07:24, 27 October 2016 (UTC)

Shortly describe the challenge your team is about to solve (max 200-250 characters with spaces):

  • We will improve evidence-based decision support for the governance of Baltic Sea sustainability. The results are useful for other sea areas, and the methods developed and tested produce shared understanding and support complex decision situations.

Submission

We are meeting at a time of immense challenges to sustainable development. United Nations has introduced the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development to change our world. The objective of the Agenda is to build a better future for all of us. These goals are universal and belong to us all: countries, cities, companies, schools, you and me. This is our common agenda.

To solve grand challenges we need multidisciplinary approaches, broad-minded thinking and bold boundary crossings. The science based competition and idea accelerator, Helsinki Challenge, is a platform for collaboration: science and arts communities, business, decision makers, public sector and other actors of the society – we all need to join the movement to make the goals for sustainable development reality. Through the Helsinki Challenge collaboration we can create solutions for grand challenges and for the future well-being – together!

Helsinki Challenge 2016-2017 themes are: Sustainable Planet, People in Change and Urban Future. For more information kindly check challenge.helsinki.fi

Kindly submit the competition entry by November 15th, 2016.

Criteria

Helsinki Challenge competition entries will be evaluated through the following criteria

Science-based

As a science-based competition, all of the Helsinki Challenge teams need to have a firm link with academic work and practices. Ideally, the solution and the team are founded on a firm research-base (i.e. the team’s work is based on their own research), and the solution provides academic research with new insights and as such, feeds back to academia.

Impact

Impact is the main driving force of Helsinki Challenge: both the teams and the university are trying to find new ways of maximising the impact of research through the process. Impact is essentially about sustainable change: how to measure it and evaluate the team’s progression towards a better society. It can be measured both by the scale or the depth of the change the team is aspiring towards.

Solution-focused

Ultimately, solution is a medium for achieving impact. By this definition the successful Helsinki Challenge teams must be passionately aimed at building their solution and ways to achieve results effectively. The solution must be feasible, although it can be research-focused and abstract.

Creativity

The team’s ability to reframe the problem in new ways, to connect new partnerships and collaborations in new unforeseen contexts and finding new approaches for solutionizing are categories through which the jury can measure the team’s creativity.

Originality

Originality of the solution requires understanding of past and current iterations. This demands benchmarking. Originality can be measured by asking how and why the new solution excels existing solutions.


Describe the Challenge

Choose the theme *

  • Sustainable Planet
  • Urban Future
  • People in Change
Shortly describe the challenge your team is about to solve. Explicate also your team’s proposed solution to the challenge, the scientific methods to be employed, and any multidisciplinary collaboration the project involves. Justify the challenge by showing why it is an important challenge for science and society, and how your team’s solution is unique and innovative one. (max 2500 characters with spaces) *

Collaboration and Impact

Shortly describe the project’s intended collaboration inside and outside the academia. Firstly, explain the working of the team and its division of responsibilities, and depict also any scientific collaboration inside your host institution as well as between your team and other higher education institutions. Secondly, describe how the project interacts with the society, and represent any actual or planned cooperation with companies, the public and the third sector, and the general public. Justify your alleged solution by showing how it would change the world. Lastly, describe the funding plan of the project, list actual and planned funding resources, and explain your plans for using the prize money.(max 2500 characters with spaces) *

Science

All entries in the Helsinki Challenge competition should represent solid science. Describe your and the team’s most significant scientific achievements, and how they relate to the current Helsinki Challenge project. (max 2500 characters with spaces)

Introduce the team

Team leader (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail) *
Contact person (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail) *
Team member responsible for communication (name, title, organization, telephone number, e-mail) *
Other team members (name, title, organization, e-mail) *