Policy Roundtable: Strengthening Artistic Research and Supporting Linguistic and Cultural Diversity
ποΈ Thursday, 25 June β 12:10pm
- 1:10pm
(60 mins)
Presenters
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Abstract
This proposal follows up on the statement shared by Teresa Ribera, Vice President of the EU, at the PACESETTERS Summit (November 2025), where she suggested, 'Let us reclaim competitiveness as collaboration. Let us make Europeβs diversity β linguistic, cultural, and territorial β our most powerful assetβ. The roundtable will discuss how artistic research can explore, support and promote linguistic and cultural diversity, and how these capacities can be strengthened within research and policy frameworks.
Drawing on ongoing debates within cultural policy, arts research evaluation, and science and technology studies, this session brings together practitioners, researchers, funding agencies, and institutional leaders to interrogate normative assumptions and practical mechanisms for policy integration. Specifically, the discussion will examine three interrelated dimensions: epistemic recognition (policy as a space for plural knowledge systems), governance and funding design (structures that align with artistic methodologies), and impact and accountability (approaches that respect both qualitative richness and policy reporting needs).
The roundtable will include Florian Schneider and representative of the Policy Work Package from the COST Action on Artistic Intelligence, whose contribution will provide insight from ongoing transnational coordination and policy-oriented research across Europe.
The session is designed not only as a forum for debate but as a structured policy-development moment. The discussion will culminate in a set of concrete recommendations synthesised from the exchange among participants. These recommendations will form the basis of a policy brief aimed at European and national decision-makers, contributing to the consolidation of a more coherent and enabling framework for artistic research.
Drawing on ongoing debates within cultural policy, arts research evaluation, and science and technology studies, this session brings together practitioners, researchers, funding agencies, and institutional leaders to interrogate normative assumptions and practical mechanisms for policy integration. Specifically, the discussion will examine three interrelated dimensions: epistemic recognition (policy as a space for plural knowledge systems), governance and funding design (structures that align with artistic methodologies), and impact and accountability (approaches that respect both qualitative richness and policy reporting needs).
The roundtable will include Florian Schneider and representative of the Policy Work Package from the COST Action on Artistic Intelligence, whose contribution will provide insight from ongoing transnational coordination and policy-oriented research across Europe.
The session is designed not only as a forum for debate but as a structured policy-development moment. The discussion will culminate in a set of concrete recommendations synthesised from the exchange among participants. These recommendations will form the basis of a policy brief aimed at European and national decision-makers, contributing to the consolidation of a more coherent and enabling framework for artistic research.
Biography
Simona De Rosa (PhD) is partner and senior researcher of T6 Ecosystems srl. Since 2015, she has participated in responsible positions in more than 10 European projects funded by the European Commission. Within T6 she is coordinating the Policy dialogue and advocacy activities. Furthermore, she is highly engaged in the research of the projects mainly taking care of policy analysis, strategies for ecosystem building finalised at policy development and impact assessment.
Florian Schneider is the founding director of the Institute for Creativity, a new research institute at the University of Galway, where he holds a full professorship. He has more than 25 years of experience in artistic practice, creative entrepreneurship, higher education teaching and academic leadership.
Since 2022, he has been President of the Society for Artistic Research (SAR). Since March 2024, he has been the scientific coordinator of PACESETTERS, a Horizon Europe-funded research initiative exploring how arts and culture can not only adapt to the climate crisis, but also drive the transition towards sustainable and regenerative economies.
Florian Schneider is the founding director of the Institute for Creativity, a new research institute at the University of Galway, where he holds a full professorship. He has more than 25 years of experience in artistic practice, creative entrepreneurship, higher education teaching and academic leadership.
Since 2022, he has been President of the Society for Artistic Research (SAR). Since March 2024, he has been the scientific coordinator of PACESETTERS, a Horizon Europe-funded research initiative exploring how arts and culture can not only adapt to the climate crisis, but also drive the transition towards sustainable and regenerative economies.