News

This section provides news about PASCAL together with significant developments in policy and research relating to the areas of interest to PASCAL. It is based on regular scanning of policy, practice and academic literature, including web-based sources.

We invite readers to submit items for consideration. Please send your contributions to our Submissions Administrator.

PURE Review Visit in Queensland, Australia - December 2011

The latest PURE Review Visit (CDG Review Team Leader Professor Chris Duke) took place between December 5th and 8th in Queensland, Australia. The members of the team were based at Toowoomba and the photograph shows Bruce Wilson (right, with microphone); Chris Duke, Steve Garlick and Pat Inman also took part in the in the review discussions.

PASCAL 2011 Conference rescheduled

The 2011 PASCAL Conference -- originally scheduled for October 3-5, 2011 -- is being revised in response to two key factors.

PASCAL Response to Scottish Government Green Paper on Higher Education

PASCAL has submitted a response to the SG on its current green paper on Higher Education:

Värmland - the PURE report 'will make it easier for us to keep the speed up'

Board member Professor Steve Garlick was in Sweden last week to disseminate the PURE report for Värmland (see below) at the cluster conference organised by Staffan Bjurulf, Project Manager for the region. Anders Olsson, Enterprise and Innovation Manager for Värmland,  reports that the region has continued the discussion on how to tackle work on a strategy to develop the region's human capabilities.

Localism, place-making and social innovation

In a recent presentation Josef Konwitz has pointed to the vital importance of innovation as one of the few levers currently available to governments as they seek to pull their economies out of recession (Konwitz, 2010).  He argues that the traditional factors of growth which have served the western world well from the end of the second world war have lost their potency, restricted by the very crisis from which, in earlier times, they would have fostered economic recovery.  Konvitz suggests that probably the least constrained of these factors is innovation. In his view, the burden of growth falls mainly on creativity: the ability to generate and use new knowledge and find new ways of doing things.  Innovation is important for business, governments and people, and attention is turning to strategies for encouraging innovation across the world (see, for example, OECD 2010).

14th PASCAL International Observatory Conference - South Africa

Click the image to visit site

Click the image to visit site

X