Measuring what matters: Improving usability and accessibility of policy frameworks and indicators for multidimensional well-being through collaboration
Acronym
MERGE
Description of the granted funding
Achieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and the European Union's policies on environmental and social sustainability requires a comprehensive measure of human progress that does not focus solely on GDP. However, the evidence on alternative approaches is fragmented and the lack of consensus on competing indicators and policy frameworks is a mAchieving the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and the European Union's policies on environmental and social sustainability requires a comprehensive measure of human progress that does not focus solely on GDP. However, the evidence on alternative approaches is fragmented and the lack of consensus on competing indicators and policy frameworks is a major obstacle to setting policy goals that promote multi-dimensional well-being and to monitoring and measuring progress. MERGE addresses these challenges by providing a forum for dialogue, co-creation and knowledge exchange, and by linking cutting-edge research and policy practice. A consortium of leading researchers and key communities in the field, MERGE brings together three recently launched higher education research consortia (SPES, ToBe, WISE Horizons) and an ERC grant (REAL). To scale up results, MERGE provides a framework for creating and strengthening a multidisciplinary community of researchers, a technical and knowledge network, a policy network and a network of civil society actors. Through these networks, MERGE aims to build a broad consensus on easy-to-use and acceptable indicators and frameworks for measuring multidimensional well-being within planetary boundaries in the EU and Member States, as well as in global organisations and civil society. MERGE participants will benefit from collaborative and training events, analyses, indicators, datasets and policy briefings. Through knowledge exchange, stakeholders and researchers can adopt and develop a systematic and coherent understanding of the sustainable economy paradigm in their own work.
Show moreStarting year
2024
End year
2026
Granted funding
INSTITUT D'ESTADISTICA DE CATALUNYA (ES)
28 043.88 €
Participant
RESEARCH AND DEGROWTH INTERNATIONAL (ES)
210 935 €
Participant
UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LONDON (UK)
Participant
INSTITUTE FOR FUTURE-FIT ECONOMIES GEMEINNUTZIGE UG (DE)
723 000 €
Participant
WELLBEING ECONOMY ALLIANCE (UK)
Participant
PLATE-FORME DES ONG EUROPEENNES DU SECTEUR SOCIAL AISBL (BE)
94 580.63 €
Participant
UK Office for National Statistics (UK)
Participant
PIN SOC.CONS. A R.L. - SERVIZI DIDATTICI E SCIENTIFICI PER L UNIVERSITA DI FIRENZE (IT)
289 737.5 €
Participant
EUROPEAN POLICY CENTRE (BE)
473 820.63 €
Participant
UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI FERRARA (IT)
113 985 €
Participant
UNIVERSITEIT LEIDEN (NL)
263 875.01 €
Participant
UNIVERSITEIT GENT (BE)
213 523.76 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAT DE BARCELONA (ES)
287 878.6 €
Participant
JRC -JOINT RESEARCH CENTRE- EUROPEAN COMMISSION (BE)
Participant
Amount granted
3 618 358 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
HORIZON Coordination and Support Actions
Framework programme
Horizon Europe (HORIZON)
Call
Programme part
Culture, creativity and inclusive society (11696 Social and Economic Transformations (11699 )
Topic
Towards sustainable economic policy paradigms (HORIZON-CL2-2023-TRANSFORMATIONS-01-02Call ID
HORIZON-CL2-2023-TRANSFORMATIONS-01 Other information
Funding decision number
101132524
Identified topics
inequalities, social policy, societal policy