Cross-Border Cultural and Creative Tourism in Rural and Remote Areas

Cross-Border Cultural and Creative Tourism in Rural and Remote Areas

Acronym

CROCUS

Description of the granted funding

Rural and remote areas (RRA) are rich in cultural heritage, but many also suffer from socio-economic problems such as an ageing population, out-migration, and low incomes. Cultural and creative tourism (CCT) could help address these problems by creating sustainable jobs and investment, but three key challenges and associated knowledge gaps must be overcome: (1) place-specific business models that suit different types of cultural heritage and community needs must be created; (2) tourism development must be balanced and sustainable; (3) policies at different scales should support cooperation between RRA. CROCUS addresses these key challenges by: (a) generating knowledge about which CCT business models are most appropriate for different types of heritage and rural areas; (b) creating eight cross-border living labs in which sustainable CCT business models will be prototyped (16 in total); (c) developing macro-regional and cross-border policy scenarios for each of the four EU macro-regions (Baltic Sea, Adriatic and Ionian, Alpine, and Danube); and (d) synthesising knowledge and experience from the project to create tools and resources that RRA across Europe and beyond can use to develop sustainable and inclusive CCT in the future. CROCUS will achieve this through its ambitious multi-scalar research design, innovative cross-border living labs, and participatory processes of sustainable business model prototyping. The consortium brings together leading scholars and practitioners that have extensive experience with cross-border tourism development projects, stakeholder engagement, and policy analysis. It will be the first systematic study of different types of cross-border CCT cooperation in RRA. The impact of CROCUS will be to increase sustainable and inclusive CCT and cross-border cooperation in RRA across Europe, thus unleashing the potential of cultural heritage as a driver of sustainable innovation.
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Starting year

2024

End year

2027

Granted funding

340 706.25 €
Participant
GROUP NAO APS (DK)
73 625 €
Participant
IZSLEDOVATELSKI INSTITUT V ZANGADOR (BG)
231 437.5 €
Participant
ASSOCIATION FOR TOURISM AND LEISURE EDUCATION (NL)
243 625 €
Participant
SVEUCILISTE U RIJECI, FAKULTET ZA MENADZMENT U TURIZMU I UGOSTITELJSTVU (HR)
231 285 €
Participant
TALLINN UNIVERSITY (EE)
263 361.25 €
Participant
UNIVERSITA' DEGLI STUDI DI BERGAMO (IT)
385 250 €
Participant
PANNON EGYETEM - UNIVERSITY OF PANNONIA (HU)
Participant
UNIVERZA V MARIBORU (SI)
219 500 €
Participant
AALBORG UNIVERSITET (DK)
810 943.75 €
Coordinator

Amount granted

2 799 734 €

Funder

European Union

Funding instrument

HORIZON Research and Innovation Actions

Framework programme

Horizon Europe (HORIZON)

Call

Programme part
Culture, creativity and inclusive society (11696)
Cultural Heritage (11698)
Topic
Fostering socio-economic development and job creation in rural and remote areas through cultural tourism (HORIZON-CL2-2023-HERITAGE-01-05)
Call ID
HORIZON-CL2-2023-HERITAGE-01

Other information

Funding decision number

101132454
Cross-Border Cultural and Creative Tourism in Rural and Remote Areas - Research.fi