RESILIENCE has completed some final building blocks for its research infrastructure, as evidenced by the recent publication of five core documents.
RESILIENCE is currently bringing the research infrastructure to the completion of its Preparatory Phase (2022-2026). This includes the setting-up of the legal and financial frameworks of the functioning of the research infrastructure, the preparation of signature-ready documents towards the implementation phase, the completion of the RESILIENCE services catalogue, and the establishment of legal agreements and technical frameworks for their operation.
Below is an overview of five recently published core documents (deliverables):
This deliverable collects all the documents requested for the establishment of an ERIC (European Research Infrastructure Consortium) before the signature of the member countries. The collected documents show progress made. The deliverable contains:
Go here to access Deliverable D1.2.
RESILIENCE has expanded the range of its services significantly. The presentation of around 120 community services in its User Services Catalogue is an important step toward providing easy access to digital and physical data on religion, and relevant services via one access point. Read more here.
RESILIENCE places its users at the heart of its mission, ensuring that all services are tailored to their needs, expectations, and visions. In line with this user-oriented approach, workshop formats were developed to explore what a research infrastructure supporting the study of religions in Europe must offer to be relevant, useful, and sustainable for its prospective users. Deliverable D3.2 “Workshop Proceedings 2nd Batch” presents the latest results of these workshops. The Documented Use Cases 2nd Batch (Deliverable D3.4) sheds light on six specific use cases highlighting key user needs: networking/mobility/transnational access, networking, accessibility, research data management, Digital Humanities and Data Exchange. The use cases presented here show that the Marketplace and ReIReSearch are perceived as promising, forward-looking tools with strong potential to transform research on religions. The user feedback provides precise guidance on how to transform prototypes into viable, intuitive, and valuable services.
D3.2 can be accessed here.
D3.4 can be accessed here.
Deliverable D5.1, analyses and showcases the impact the operational research infrastructure will have on various target audiences. It shows how RESILIENCE will support scientific excellence, digital innovation, cultural heritage, social inclusion and evidence-based policymaking. The deliverable also explains how RESILIENCE will measure and report on its contribution to research, society, economy and policy making once it will become fully operational. The core idea behind the analyses is that the main impact of the research infrastructure is derived from its services, because services directly reach users. Read more here.