
The Sustainable practices of integration (SprINg) project is funded by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme. Its overall objective is to gather, summarise and share the best available research and evidence on effectiveness, innovation, transferability, sustainability and evaluation methods regarding integration policies and practices.
The project worked directly with integration practitioners and stakeholders to summarise relevant evidence and share the most practical resources that could respond to the specific profile and needs of Communities of Practice (CoPs).
In this report, SprINg assesses the co-design (CD) approach used to deliver the final project outcome. Co-design is a process in which you aim to design a solution to a problem in direct collaboration with actors who are experiencing the problem. This process developed across three phases:
- Phase 0: general round of individual interviews
- Phase 1: Problem definition(s)
- Phase 2: Problem solution(s)
The report offers details on the CD approach and the type of considerations that led to the final trajectory. The results of the first phase of the CD trajectory are also discussed very briefly, as these are covered at length in the project's "Barriers to Integration" report. Subsequently, special attention is given to the results of the second co-design phase. Finally, the implications of these results are discussed and some conclusions are drawn. The report concludes by offering some recommendations based on the completed pathway.
Text provided by the SprINg project.
Details
- Geographic area
- EU Wide
- Contributor type
- Non-Governmental Organisations/Civil Society
- Original source
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