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Funded by the Monash-ENGIE Alliance, this report outlines key recommendations and drivers to help University Living Labs stimulate innovation towards collective action on global challenges like climate change.
University Living Labs are an important vehicle for real world experimentation and learning because they bring together community, government, business, NGOs and researchers on and off campus to work towards common goals for sustainable development and other societal challenges like sustainability, which are beyond any one group to tackle alone. Living labs involve university-industry partnerships, experiential learning for students, use of the campus as a testbed, and knowledge translation and commercialisation for social impact.
This study identified shared challenges and critical success factors for enabling these initiatives by speaking with academics and practitioners involved in 18 University Living Labs across Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, The Netherlands, Singapore, the UK and the US.
This report is the first international comparative study of University Living Labs focused on how these initiatives can be organised and embedded in universities. The study highlights that while University Living Labs take a variety of forms, they often face common challenges associated with insufficient governing structures, ad hoc funding, siloed institutional cultures and a lack of shared understanding. The report makes practical recommendations for overcoming these challenges through flexible coordination, investment, facilitation and communication.