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Addressing disparities in European Social Sciences & Humanities research on climate, energy and mobility: insights from a Call for Evidence survey and analysis workshops on the challenges and opportunities of working in Southern and Central & Eastern Europe

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posted on 2025-07-10, 14:51 authored by Chris Foulds, Ami Crowther, Alevgul H Sorman, Violeta Cabello, Dóra Bálint, Gergely Tagai, Viktor Varjú, Rosie Robison, Ester Galende Sánchez, Kristina Zindulková
Despite the efforts of the EU, disparities remain in terms of the participation of Social Sciences and Humanities (SSH) researchers from both Southern and Central & Eastern Europe in research collaborations, as compared to Northern and Western European scholars. To better understand these disparities, the EU Horizon Europe SSH CENTRE project ran a Call for Evidence over December 2022 to March 2023. Specifically, respondents were asked about the challenges they faced in conducting SSH research on climate, energy and/or mobility, as well as the ways in which these challenges could be addressed. The Call’s online survey was focused on maximising diversity, and it gathered views and experiences of 137 Southern and Central & Eastern European SSH researchers. The sample was balanced across genders (71 men, 66 women) and the three main themes (82 energy, 88 climate, 53 mobility), and included at least one respondent from each of the 27 target countries. The highest numbers of respondents were from Hungary (19) and Spain (21). To ensure that interpretation and analysis of the data was grounded in regional contexts, we ran two parallel analysis workshops hosted in a hybrid format (combining online and in-person participants): one in Pécs for Central & Eastern European SSH researchers (34 participants); and one in Bilbao for Southern European SSH researchers (26 participants). These workshops focused on discussing the relationship between SSH-STEM disciplines, analysing the institutional contexts, and discussing the implications for domestic and EU research funding relations. During the workshops, data collected through the survey was collectively analysed and the most important reflections were gathered into a common structure of ‘Challenges’ and ‘Ways forward’. Key messages from the workshop are being distilled in a Position Statement that focuses on the common elements while also emphasising possible differences between Southern and Central & Eastern Europe.<p></p>

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Item sub-type

data-paper, Journal Article

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

3

Page range

150-150

Publication title

Open Research Europe

ISSN

2732-5121

Publisher

F1000 Research Ltd

Location

Belgium

File version

  • Published version

Language

  • eng

Media of output

Electronic-eCollection

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  • Global Sustainability Institute (GSI) Outputs

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