
Local Government Group
Local Government Group
4 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2010 - 2014Partners:Halcrow Group Limited, Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue, Leicestershire Fire & Rescue, University of Southampton, Ove Arup & Partners Ltd +35 partnersHalcrow Group Limited,Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue,Leicestershire Fire & Rescue,University of Southampton,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,Halcrow Group Ltd,RICS,DHSC,Public Health England,Costain Ltd,NYA,Local Government Group,Arup Group Ltd,Tamworth Borough Council,Newcastle City Council,British Telecommunications plc,Tyne and Wear Emergency Planning Unit,NEWCASTLE CITY COUNCIL,Newcastle City Council,Institution of Civil Engineers,Leicestershire Fire and Rescue Service,The Cabinet Office,National Youth Agency,PHE,Tyne and Wear Emergency Planning Unit,[no title available],University of Southampton,British Red Cross,BT Group (United Kingdom),Cabinet Office,British Telecom,PUBLIC HEALTH ENGLAND,British Red Cross,Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors,Tamworth Borough Council,Local Government Group,COSTAIN LTD,Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue,LONDON UNDERGROUND LIMITED,ICEFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/I005943/1Funder Contribution: 1,429,320 GBPWhat will the UK's critical infrastructure look like in 2030? In 2050? How resilient will it be? Decisions taken now by policy makers, NGOs, industrialists, and user communities will influence the answers to these questions. How can this decision making be best informed by considerations of infrastructural resilience? This project will consider future developments in the UK's energy and transport infrastructure and the resilience of these systems to natural and malicious threats and hazards, delivering a) fresh perspectives on how the inter-relations amongst our critical infrastructure sectors impact on current and future UK resilience, b) a state-of-the-art integrated social science/engineering methodology that can be generalised to address different sectors and scenarios, and c) an interactive demonstrator simulation that operationalises the otherwise nebulous concept of resilience for a wide range of decision makers and stakeholders.Current reports from the Institute for Public Policy Research, the Institution of Civil Engineers, the Council for Science and Technology, and the Cabinet Office are united in their assessment that achieving and sustaining resilience is the key challenge facing the UK's critical infrastructure. They are also unanimous in their assessment of the main issues. First, there is agreement on the main threats to national infrastructure: i) climate change; ii) terrorist attacks; iii) systemic failure. Second, the complex, disparate and interconnected nature of the UK's infrastructure systems is highlighted as a key concern by all. Our critical infrastructure is highly fragmented both in terms of its governance and in terms of the number of agencies charged with achieving and maintaining resilience, which range from national government to local services and even community groups such as local resilience forums. Moreover, the cross-sector interactions amongst different technological systems within the national critical infrastructure are not well understood, with key inter-dependencies potentially overlooked. Initiatives such as the Cabinet Office's new Natural Hazards Team are working to address this. The establishment of such bodies with responsibility for oversight and improving joined up resilience is a key recommendation in all four reports. However, such bodies currently lack two critical resources: (1) a full understanding of the resilience implications of our current and future infrastructural organisation; and (2) vehicles for effectively conveying this understanding to the full range of relevant stakeholders for whom the term resilience is currently difficult to understand in anything other than an abstract sense. The Resilient Futures project will engage directly with this context by working with relevant stakeholders from many sectors and governance levels to achieve a step change in both (1) and (2). To achieve this, we will focus on future rather than present UK infrastructure. This is for a two reasons. First, we intend to engender a paradigm shift in resilience thinking - from a fragmented short-termism that encourages agencies to focus on protecting their own current assets from presently perceived threats to a longer-term inter-dependent perspective recognising that the nature of both disruptive events and the systems that are disrupted is constantly evolving and that our efforts towards achieving resilience now must not compromise our future resilience. Second, focussing on a 2030/2050 time-frame lifts discussion out of the politically charged here and now to a context in which there is more room for discussion, learning and organisational change. A focus on *current resilience* must overcome a natural tendency for the agencies involved to defend their current processes and practices, explain their past record of disruption management, etc., before the conversation can move to engaging with potential for improvement, learning and change.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2016Partners:DEFRA, DECC, Transport Scotland, National Highways, Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom) +85 partnersDEFRA,DECC,Transport Scotland,National Highways,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),CABE,Halcrow Group Ltd,EA,Atkins Ltd,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,MWH UK Ltd,United Utilities Water PLC,Costain Ltd,BT Laboratories,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,Communities and Local Government,Willis Limited,Willis Limited,Department of Energy and Climate Change,BAM Nuttall Ltd,The Cabinet Office,Innovate UK,Infrastructure UK,Black & Veatch,E ON Central Networks plc,BT Laboratories,Atkins UK,JBA Consulting,Parsons Brinckerhoff,Arup Group Ltd,BP (UK),Town & Country Planning Assoc (TCPA),Local Government Group,Veolia Environmental Services,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,ICE,The Institution of Engineering and Tech,NWL,Halcrow Group Limited,KTN - Energy Generation and Supply,MET OFFICE,National Grid PLC,CABE,Town & Country Planning ASS,Black & Veatch,Network Rail Ltd,OS,Kelda Group (United Kingdom),ANEC,UKWIR,E.ON E&P UK Ltd,Association of North East Councils,UK Water Industry Research Ltd (UKWIR),National Grid,Highways Agency,Met Office,Scottish Government,Communities and Local Government,Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,Institution of Engineering & Technology,BAM Nuttall Ltd,DEFRA Environment, Food & Rural Affairs,Mott Macdonald,Infrastructure and Project Authority,Ordnance Survey,DfT,Cabinet Office,Swanbarton Limited,Department for Transport,COSTAIN LTD,Parsons Brinckerhoff,Veolia Environmental Services,Local Government Group,ENVIRONMENT AGENCY,University of Oxford,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,B P International Ltd,Network Rail,Northumbrian Water Group plc,Institution of Civil Engineers,Swanbarton Limited,Yorkshire Water,Royal Haskoning,MWH UK Ltd,Transport Scotland,United Utilities,UKRI,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,Royal Haskoning,JBA ConsultingFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/I01344X/2Funder Contribution: 4,780,610 GBPNational infrastructure (NI) systems (energy, transport, water, waste and ICT) in the UK and in advanced economies globally face serious challenges. The 2009 Council for Science and Technology (CST) report on NI in the UK identified significant vulnerabilities, capacity limitations and a number of NI components nearing the end of their useful life. It also highlighted serious fragmentation in the arrangements for infrastructure provision in the UK. There is an urgent need to reduce carbon emissions from infrastructure, to respond to future demographic, social and lifestyle changes and to build resilience to intensifying impacts of climate change. If this process of transforming NI is to take place efficiently, whilst also minimising the associated risks, it will need to be underpinned by a long-term, cross-sectoral approach to understanding NI performance under a range of possible futures. The 'systems of systems' analysis that must form the basis for such a strategic approach does not yet exist - this inter-disciplinary research programme will provide it.The aim of the UK Infrastructure Transitions Research Consortium is to develop and demonstrate a new generation of system simulation models and tools to inform analysis, planning and design of NI. The research will deal with energy, transport, water, waste and ICT systems at a national scale, developing new methods for analysing their performance, risks and interdependencies. It will provide a virtual environment in which we will test strategies for long term investment in NI and understand how alternative strategies perform with respect to policy constraints such as reliability and security of supply, cost, carbon emissions, and adaptability to demographic and climate change.The research programme is structured around four major challenges:1. How can infrastructure capacity and demand be balanced in an uncertain future? We will develop methods for modelling capacity, demand and interdependence in NI systems in a compatible way under a wide range of technological, socio-economic and climate futures. We will thereby provide the tools needed to identify robust strategies for sustainably balancing capacity and demand.2. What are the risks of infrastructure failure and how can we adapt NI to make it more resilient?We will analyse the risks of interdependent infrastructure failure by establishing network models of NI and analysing the consequences of failure for people and the economy. Information on key vulnerabilities and risks will be used to identify ways of adapting infrastructure systems to reduce risks in future.3. How do infrastructure systems evolve and interact with society and the economy? Starting with idealised simulations and working up to the national scale, we will develop new models of how infrastructure, society and the economy evolve in the long term. We will use the simulation models to demonstrate alternative long term futures for infrastructure provision and how they might be reached.4. What should the UK's strategy be for integrated provision of NI in the long term? Working with a remarkable group of project partners in government and industry, we will use our new methods to develop and test alternative strategies for Britain's NI, building an evidence-based case for a transition to sustainability. We will analyse the governance arrangements necessary to ensure that this transition is realisable in practice.A Programme Grant provides the opportunity to work flexibly with key partners in government and industry to address research challenges of national importance in a sustained way over five years. Our ambition is that through development of a new generation of tools, in concert with our government and industry partners, we will enable a revolution in the strategic analysis of NI provision in the UK, whilst at the same time becoming an international landmark programme recognised for novelty, research excellence and impact.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2012 - 2018Partners:Norfolk Museum and Archaeology Service, Sustrans, The Clore Duffield Foundation, Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service, MANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL +31 partnersNorfolk Museum and Archaeology Service,Sustrans,The Clore Duffield Foundation,Norfolk Museums and Archaeology Service,MANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL,Nat Council for Voluntary Organisations,Department for Culture Media and Sport,Local Government Group,Historic Bldgs & Mnts Commis for England,Paul Hamlyn Foundation,Vivacity,The University of Manchester,Historic England,Museums Association,Sport England,Working Men's Club & Institute Union Ltd,C&IU,Department for Culture Media and Sport,Voluntary Arts Network,Clore Duffield Foundation,University of Salford,Voluntary Arts Network,The Paul Hamlyn Foundation,Creative Scotland,Arts Council England,Sustrans,University of Manchester,Manchester City Council,Local Government Group,Creative Scotland,Nat Council for Voluntary Organisations,Manchester City Council,Museums Association,Arts Council England,Sports England,VivacityFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: AH/J005401/1Funder Contribution: 1,221,680 GBPThis project proposes a radical re-evaluation of the relationship between participation and cultural value. Bringing together evidence from in-depth historical analyses, the re-use of existing quantitative data and new qualitative research on the detail, dynamics and significance of 'everyday participation', it will create new understandings of community formation, connectivity and capacity through participation. Orthodox models of the creative economy and ensuing cultural policy are based on a narrow definition of cultural participation; one that captures formal engagement with traditional cultural institutions, such as museums and galleries, but overlooks other activities, for instance community festivals and hobbies. This frame, founded historically on deficit based assumptions of the logics for state cultural support, misses opportunities to understand the variety of forms of participation and their (positive and negative) consequences. We argue that by creating new understandings of the relationships between everyday participation, community and cultural value, we will reveal evidence of hidden assets and resources that can be mobilised to promote better identification and more equitable resourcing of cultural opportunities, generate well-being and contribute to the development of creative local economies. The central research questions are: - How, historically, did we arrive at the definitions, fields of knowledge and policy frames informing notions of cultural participation and value today? - What are the forms and practices of everyday participation - where do they take place? How are they valued? And how do these practices relate to formal participation? - How is participation shaped by space, place and locality? - How are communities made, unmade, divided and connected through participation? - How can broader understandings of value in and through participation be used to inform the development of vibrant communities and creative local economies? - How do we reconnect cultural policy and institutions with everyday participation? Using a variety of methodologies, including historical analysis, qualitative work with communities of practice and use, and the reanalysis of existing data on participation and time-use, this project focuses on six contrasting 'cultural ecosystems' to investigate the connections between multiple understandings of community (geographical, elective, identity based etc), cultural value, 'cultural economy' and everyday participation. The findings from the situated case studies will inform four partnership-operated trials of new policy interventions or of professional or community practices. Throughout the project research will be integrated with key partners, stakeholder cultural and community organisations in order to evolve better, shared understandings of everyday cultural participation and the implications of this for policy makers and cultural organisations at national, local and community levels.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2011 - 2011Partners:ICE, E.ON E&P UK Ltd, Institution of Engineering & Technology, Met Office, COSTAIN LTD +85 partnersICE,E.ON E&P UK Ltd,Institution of Engineering & Technology,Met Office,COSTAIN LTD,UKRI,Environment Agency,ANEC,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,Institution of Civil Engineers,MWH UK Ltd,Parsons Brinckerhoff,Scottish Government,Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,Yorkshire Water Services Ltd,United Utilities (United Kingdom),BT Laboratories,Communities and Local Government,BT Laboratories,Royal Haskoning,UKWIR,Association of North East Councils,Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy,Atkins UK,UK Water Industry Research Ltd (UKWIR),National Grid,Highways Agency,JBA Consulting,Newcastle University,Scottish and Southern Energy SSE plc,Kelda Group (United Kingdom),Mott Macdonald,Infrastructure and Project Authority,Town & Country Planning Assoc (TCPA),National Grid PLC,CABE,Black & Veatch,Infrastructure UK,OS,MWH UK Ltd,Costain Ltd,E ON Central Networks plc,Department for Environment Food and Rural Affairs,DECC,Transport Scotland,Willis Limited,Network Rail Ltd,Atkins (United Kingdom),Halcrow Group Limited,BP Exploration Operating Company Ltd,Cabinet Office,Swanbarton Limited,Scottish and Southern Energy,Northumbrian Water Group plc,B P International Ltd,Institution of Mechanical Engineers,DEFRA,The Cabinet Office,Transport Scotland,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,Newcastle University,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),BAM Nuttall Ltd,Parsons Brinckerhoff,Arup Group Ltd,Network Rail,Black & Veatch,Department for Transport,Willis Limited,CABE,Ordnance Survey,DfT,United Utilities,Local Government Group,Swanbarton Limited,Veolia Environmental Services,Royal Haskoning,Local Government Group,NWL,KTN - Energy Generation and Supply,Veolia,EA,The Institution of Engineering and Tech,Met Office,BAM Nuttall Ltd,Innovate UK,Communities and Local Government,Town & Country Planning ASS,JBA Consulting,Halcrow Group LtdFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/I01344X/1Funder Contribution: 4,730,840 GBPNational infrastructure (NI) systems (energy, transport, water, waste and ICT) in the UK and in advanced economies globally face serious challenges. The 2009 Council for Science and Technology (CST) report on NI in the UK identified significant vulnerabilities, capacity limitations and a number of NI components nearing the end of their useful life. It also highlighted serious fragmentation in the arrangements for infrastructure provision in the UK. There is an urgent need to reduce carbon emissions from infrastructure, to respond to future demographic, social and lifestyle changes and to build resilience to intensifying impacts of climate change. If this process of transforming NI is to take place efficiently, whilst also minimising the associated risks, it will need to be underpinned by a long-term, cross-sectoral approach to understanding NI performance under a range of possible futures. The 'systems of systems' analysis that must form the basis for such a strategic approach does not yet exist - this inter-disciplinary research programme will provide it.The aim of the UK Infrastructure Transitions Research Consortium is to develop and demonstrate a new generation of system simulation models and tools to inform analysis, planning and design of NI. The research will deal with energy, transport, water, waste and ICT systems at a national scale, developing new methods for analysing their performance, risks and interdependencies. It will provide a virtual environment in which we will test strategies for long term investment in NI and understand how alternative strategies perform with respect to policy constraints such as reliability and security of supply, cost, carbon emissions, and adaptability to demographic and climate change.The research programme is structured around four major challenges:1. How can infrastructure capacity and demand be balanced in an uncertain future? We will develop methods for modelling capacity, demand and interdependence in NI systems in a compatible way under a wide range of technological, socio-economic and climate futures. We will thereby provide the tools needed to identify robust strategies for sustainably balancing capacity and demand.2. What are the risks of infrastructure failure and how can we adapt NI to make it more resilient?We will analyse the risks of interdependent infrastructure failure by establishing network models of NI and analysing the consequences of failure for people and the economy. Information on key vulnerabilities and risks will be used to identify ways of adapting infrastructure systems to reduce risks in future.3. How do infrastructure systems evolve and interact with society and the economy? Starting with idealised simulations and working up to the national scale, we will develop new models of how infrastructure, society and the economy evolve in the long term. We will use the simulation models to demonstrate alternative long term futures for infrastructure provision and how they might be reached.4. What should the UK's strategy be for integrated provision of NI in the long term? Working with a remarkable group of project partners in government and industry, we will use our new methods to develop and test alternative strategies for Britain's NI, building an evidence-based case for a transition to sustainability. We will analyse the governance arrangements necessary to ensure that this transition is realisable in practice.A Programme Grant provides the opportunity to work flexibly with key partners in government and industry to address research challenges of national importance in a sustained way over five years. Our ambition is that through development of a new generation of tools, in concert with our government and industry partners, we will enable a revolution in the strategic analysis of NI provision in the UK, whilst at the same time becoming an international landmark programme recognised for novelty, research excellence and impact.
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