6th International PhDays Conference
The 6th edition of International PhDays Conference, taking place on March 5th, 6th & 7th at the INGENIO (CSIC-UPV) facilities in València, is a call for a critical reappraisal of innovation, in particular: the social understanding of its nature; the new challenges it poses, including environmental and socio-economic effects; and the policy responses that emerge or can be proposed to deal with them. This event will encourage debates in two parallel broad domains: ‘Pushing the boundaries: Redefining the limits of innovation’ and ‘New forms of generating innovation’. We strive for detailed debates on the role of public administration as a facilitator of sustainable innovation, alongside case studies that provide key insights into both success and failure in innovation. Additionally, we invite transdisciplinary methodologies that advance new understanding of innovation while promoting equity and knowledge co-creation. The 6th edition of this conference, Re-focusing Innovation: Governance Frames, Innovation Ecosystems, and Co-creation Networks, will seek to promote dialogue around new governance models, innovation ecosystems, and networks that connect academia with civil society, businesses, and governments to address social, environmental, and economic challenges. We aim to engage in in-depth discussions about the role of public administration in facilitating sustainable innovation, supported by case studies that offer valuable lessons from both successful and unsuccessful innovations. Furthermore, we encourage the use of transdisciplinary approaches that enhance our understanding of innovation while fostering equity and collaborative knowledge co-creation.
URI permanente para esta colecciónhttps://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/229209
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Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Feminization of food sovereignty: Analysis of a GIAHS case(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Pardo Fuentes, Ximena; CCD y ERASMUS[EN] This study explores the perceptions, experiences and ancestral knowledge of women seed keepers in Chiloé in the exercise of their food sovereignty, as well as the strategies they use to defend it. The interest of this study lies both in the need to vindicate the primordial role played by women farmers in the fight against hunger in the world included in SDG 2 of the 2030 Agenda; and to alleviate the scarcity of existing research on the fundamental work of the women seed keepers of Chiloé in the realization of food sovereignty, who have been chosen as a paradigmatic example for this research. Likewise, the relevance of this research lies in the fact that both Chiloé and several regions of Spain have been declared as GIAHS by FAO, aspiring that the results of this study contribute to the strengthening of the work carried out in this sense in these territories.By applying a qualitative methodology through semi-structured interviews, focus group discussions and participant observation with women seed keepers living in various communes of the Chiloé archipelago, results were obtained that showed a feminization of the exercise of food sovereignty under stress both by socio-ecological challenges and by multiple structural oppressions of fundamentally capitalist, colonial and patriarchal roots; but which is nevertheless defended thanks to the agency of these women. It is concluded that the greater the feminization of agriculture, the greater the possibilities of feminization of rural poverty, thus intensifying the strategies of feminization of both the exercise and the defense of food sovereignty by Chiloé peasant women; in addition to the necessary joint approach of gender, hunger and environment in the SDGs and in development policies for the search for comprehensive solutions.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Innovative Governance for a Sustainable Future: Barriers and Enablers in the Public Management of Coastal Wetlands in the Valencian Community(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Luján Climent, Irene; Enguer Saus, Joan; Aldeguer Cerdá, Bernabé; Barberà Aresté, Óscar; European Commission; UK Research and Innovation[EN] Over the last twenty years, the governance and public management of natural resources and spaces in the Valencian Community have undergone significant changes, adapting to modern challenges such as environmental sustainability. This paper aims to evaluate how institutional dynamics and political shifts have influenced the evolution of governance in Valencian coastal wetlands, focusing on the barriers and enablers across five key innovations: the integration of land-sea planning and management; the use of scientific knowledge; citizen participation and engagement; the development of prospective and predictive strategies; and the use of digital tools (Fobé et al., 2024). Moreover, these innovations are categorized into three types: social, technological, and institutional (OCDE, 2018). The study spans from 1994 to 2024, during a period of expanded Valencian self-government that began in the early 1980s.The research addresses gaps identified in comparative literature by examining the practical implications of diffuse roles, coordination challenges, resource limitations, and unequal power dynamics in implementing new governance strategies (Aukes et al., 2020; Platjouw et al., 2024). By exploring these issues in the specific context of Valencian coastal wetlands, the study provides deeper insights into overcoming systemic barriers in coastal governance frameworks (Viñals & Ors, 1995).The study employs qualitative techniques, including documentary, legislative, governmental, and parliamentary content analysis and discourse analysis with key stakeholders (SHs). Data collection methods involve analysing relevant policies and legislative frameworks, as well as interviews with key stakeholders, including government officials, community leaders, civil servants and representatives from environmental organizations, to provide additional insights. A comparative analysis of governance models and their effectiveness in addressing environmental challenges is also conducted.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , The Evolution of Corporate Science in Europe: Characterizing Publication Patterns and Scientific Novelty(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Espinosa, Alejandro; Llopis, Oscar; University of Valencia, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades[EN] Corporate Science (CS)—the study of how firms conduct scientific research—has been a growing field of research. Nonetheless, there still persist a significant bias in terms of geographical area, with most studies centering on the U.S. scientific-Industrial complex (Rotolo et al., 2022). Furthermore, there has been little research on the characteristics of the publications themselves, beyond classical citation-based metrics. With our study we aim to first, reduce the geographical gap by characterizing and establishing a set of stylized facts on the evolution and current state of CS in 27 European Union member states, and second we obtain empirical evidence on the degree of novelty displayed by these publications. In order to achieve this, we build a comprehensive dataset of publishing European corporations and match it with their corresponding publications, which we latter enrich with patent and bibliometric data. We aim to contribute to the growing literature of Corporate Science research by providing evidence of whether the apparent decline is a U.S. only phenomenon or a global trend (Arora et al., 2018; Simeth and Raffo, 2013), and discern how European industrial researchers contribute to the scientific community in terms of novelty.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Critical Analysis of the Common Agricultural Policy from an ecofeminist perspective: Discursive Foundations, Historical Context, and New Agrarian Challenges(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Calvet Nogues, Maria del Mar[EN] This study critically analyzes the Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) through an ecofeminist lens, employing "What’s the Problem Represented to Be?" (WPR) methodology. The research focuses on the discursive foundations and socio-political context of the CAP, with particular attention to its latest reform (2023–2027). By identifying the dominant discourses underpinning the policy, the preliminary results reveal a historical bias which favors industrialized agricultural models while marginalizing alternative approaches for more sustainable and fair food systems.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Inclusive innovation through Collective IPRs: An Empirical Study on the EU Wine industry(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Yamanoglu, Rahmi Can[EN] In response to the unequal distribution of innovative activity, the concept of inclusive innovation has emerged as a paradigm to address socio-economic disparities by actively integrating marginalised groups into the innovation process. This study sheds light on an underexplored aspect of inclusive innovation and investigates how collective intellectual property rights, specifically geographical indications, and collective trademarks, can serve as indicators of regional inclusive innovation. Focusing on the EU wine industry, a sector deeply rooted in regional identity and innovation, this research examines the role of collective intellectual property rights in fostering inclusive regional innovation.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Mapping Supply Chain Shifts under widespread supply chain risks — Take the Global Battery Industry as An Example(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Guo, Linyi[EN] The global-level exchanges of raw materials, manufactured goods, and information are highly intertwined. Multiple factors result in supply chain disruptions. As an essential part of supply chain management, the main objective of this research is to integrate the efficient supply chain information among the upstream and downstream suppliers to generate supply chain maps based on different time points. Despite the high unavailability of the multi-tier supplier data, this study aims to improve the accuracy of the buyer-supplier network by the material/good flow to enhance supply chain transparency and visibility and to propose a method to construct a dynamic global supply chain network in a particular industry. This study will mainly concentrate on two aims. First, the construction of the global supply chain, specifically in the battery industry.Second, discover changes at the supply chain level. Changes will be carried on from geographical changes, network changes, ownership changes, structural changes, and technological/ knowledge changes. These dimensions could help better explore the underlying mechanisms in the global supply chain.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , From market exclusion to Local Agrifood System’s transformation: grounding public data infrastructures of Valèncian Short Food Chains(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Galiana-Carballo, Cristina; Instituto de Gestión de la Innovación y del Conocimiento[EN] Short food chains (SFCs) have long garnered interest from producers and consumers due to their potential to integrate environmental, economic, and social sustainability. Yet several uncertainties and gaps remain in SFCs studies. Moreover, SFCs continue to face significant challenges related to poor performance, scalability, and economic viability when compared with their alternatives. SFCs logistic ties are characterized by high levels of transparency, cooperation and enhanced governance among local stakeholders, thus contributing to Local Agrifood System (LAFS) transformations. The city of València exemplifies an ongoing commitment to LAFS sustainability, notably through its adherence to the Milan Urban Food Policy Pact (MUFPP), which promotes local food governance and agroecological transition. València's metropolitan area encompasses highly productive agricultural land, significant fisheries, and livestock facilities that contribute to local food capacity constrained by weak SFCs, thus a bottleneck in local food supply is present. Local farmers experience market exclusion due to factors such as small-scale operations, limited access to capital, price volatility, and the dominance of large retailers in the global food supply chain. Additionally, while SFCs are often associated with positive environmental and social outcomes, empirical evidence remains inconclusive regarding their comparative profitability and sustainability. Our research aims to contribute to the upscaling assessment of SFCs in València by systematically characterizing existing supply chains and analyzing their environmental, social, and economic impacts. By leveraging and updating local quantitative and qualitative data on food flows, costs, and losses, we seek to enhance understanding of SFC performance. Employing a mixed-methods approach that integrates Social Network Analysis (SNA) and Material and Energy Flow Analysis (MFA), our study will address critical gaps in data collection and assessment. Ultimately, our research seeks to provide local public authorities with updated 2024 data and data-driven tools to support evidence-based local food policies, fostering a more sustainable and resilient agrifood system in València.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Democratizing Transformative Innovation Policy: a proposal from Just Transition approach(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Furió-Vico, Clara; Instituto de Gestión de la Innovación y del Conocimiento; Departamento de Proyectos de Ingeniería[EN] The objective of this research is to analyze, from the perspective of Just Transitions, the case study of the new governance model developed by the Generalitat de Catalunya "Shared Agendas" in the province of Lleida. Through the methodological proposal of the Regional Pathways to Sustainability, it is intended to capture complex institutional dynamics in regions through actors, networks and events in space-time and, subsequently, from the Just Transitions approach, carry out an analysis from the four models of justice: procedural, distributive, recognition and restorative. The methodology used is qualitative through documentary analysis, semi-structured interviews and participant observation. The study will be developed over three years, structured in strategic stages that include the review of the literature, fieldwork in the province of Lleida, the analysis of results and the main conclusions. The ultimate goal of this research is to contribute to rethinking how transitions towards social and environmental sustainability are generated through key elements and actors, such as governance and public administrations.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Public Health Science Communication in Bolivia: Entanglements with Traditional Practices in a Pluricultural Environment – A Scoping Review Protocol(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Landívar Paz, Guidiana[EN] This study examines the dynamics of science communication in Bolivia, a pluricultural society where modern scientific practices intersect with deeply rooted traditional knowledge systems. Framed within the context of the COVID-19 pandemic, it explores how public health communication strategies integrated indigenous practices, cultural beliefs, and scientific expertise to address a global health crisis in a localized and culturally sensitive manner. This document outlines a systematic review protocol based on PRISMA-ScR, emphasizing the inclusion of grey literature to capture the nuances of Bolivia’s public health communication strategies.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Community Art in Eco-Socially Challenged Territories: Co-Creating Futures in l’Horta Sud(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) M-Domènech, Ruth; Instituto de Gestión de la Innovación y del Conocimiento[EN] Community art, as a participatory and transformative practice, offers significant potential for addressing eco-social injustices in territories shaped by historical exploitation and vulnerability. This article examines a community art process initiated in May 2024 in collaboration with the Fundació Horta Sud and twelve local associations in l'Horta Sud, a Valencian comarca profoundly affected by the eco-social crisis. Framed within a Feminist Action Research methodology, the project aimed to strengthen the associative fabric, foster collective reflection, and develop shared visions for the future. The process was interrupted by the devastating DANA that struck the region in October 2024, highlighting the urgency of transformative responses. This event, underscores the compounded impacts of climate change and systemic vulnerabilities linked to a socio-economic model prioritizing neoliberal growth. The project seeks to address the collective repair of the territory and the aftermath of the DANA in 2025. This process emphasizes the role of community art as a platform for resilience, collective agency, and envisioning reparative futures. However, its transformative potential is contingent on critically addressing entrenched power structures and ensuring meaningful impacts. This article highlights the methodological value of community art in confronting eco-social crises while recognizing the challenges and limitations inherent in such initiatives. Ultimately, it advocates for sustained collective efforts and alliances that transcend artistic action, valuing the process as a critical component of systemic change.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Science Park and regional development in new understanding: The case studies of Thailand(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Chutichoodet, Thanaporn[EN] In the literature of science park development, there is limited understanding on the evolving roles and implementation in different context. By addressing this gap, this research explores on ‘how do university science parks play active roles in regional innovation policy’. This research aims to unfold the implementation of university science park (USP) mechanisms through the lens of agency concept in peripheral region.Comparative studies between Science and Technology Park, Chiang Mai University (STeP) in the Northern region and Khon Kaen University Science Park (KKUSP), Khon Kaen University in the Northeastern region.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , The projectified city: implications for stakeholder engagement(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Escario-Chust, Ana; Instituto de Gestión de la Innovación y del Conocimiento; Departamento de Dibujo; Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería Aeroespacial y Diseño Industrial[EN] Through a qualitative analysis of four European Mission Cities—Valencia, Budapest, Amsterdam, and The Hague—this study explores how projectification influences multi stakeholder governance and the agency of these processes. The findings highlight the challenges of sustaining engagement and long-term collaboration in projectified governance models and emphasize the need for adaptive frameworks that balance short-term project-based initiatives with long-term institutional change. This paper contributes to ongoing discussions on sustainability governance by proposing strategies to enhance stakeholder agency and ensure systemic transformation in urban climate action.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Biocomposites innovation system. Implications of advanced biomaterials in the implementation, development and projection of a circular bioeconomy model(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Fernández Fortunato, Eugenia Eliana; Jiménez-Sáez, Fernando; Hontoria Hernández, Eloy; Instituto de Gestión de la Innovación y del Conocimiento; Departamento de Proyectos de Ingeniería; Escuela Técnica Superior de Ingeniería Industrial[EN] The depletion of non-renewable resources and the ongoing ecological crisis underscore the urgent need for a profound transformation of the production system. Reducing the extraction of non-renewable raw materials and addressing the challenges posed by industrial waste have become critical priorities. In this context, the bioeconomy (BE) emerges as a valuable alternative, offering a pathway to transition from a traditional extractive model to a sustainable paradigm of production and consumption.This study examines the potential of biocomposites (BC) as advanced biomaterials to foster the development of a biomass-based industry and to support the implementation, development, and projection of the BE within the bioplastic composites sector in the European Union (EU). To this end, the Delphi Method (DM) was employed, leveraging expert knowledge, experience, and assumptions through an iterative and anonymous exchange process based on the principles of collective intelligence. This approach aims to build consensus on future-oriented subjective assumptions.Transitioning to a sustainable future requires fundamental shifts in the current development paradigm, a process that depends on collective action among stakeholders through the establishment of robust innovation systems (IS). In this transformation, public administration (PA) plays a pivotal role, capable of catalysing change through the adoption of sustainable policies. The study also discusses the potential of design to contribute to the definition of future scenarios that can be used by policymakers and industry.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Public and Private Healthcare Paths for Menstrual Pain(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Sánchez-López, S.; Instituto de Gestión de la Innovación y del Conocimiento[EN] This study explores how individuals in Spain navigate public and private healthcare systems when seeking care for menstrual discomforts. Based on data from a national online survey (n = 1,165), the qualitative research examines perceived barriers in access, continuity of care, and satisfaction with medical responses to menstrual symptoms. Respondents reported difficulties obtaining referrals within the public system, long waiting times, and limited follow-up, often leading them to seek care in the private sector. Despite this shift, many experienced similar limitations across both systems, including standardized treatment —mainly the prescription of hormonal contraceptives— and a perceived minimization of symptoms.The study also considers the broader implications of these experiences, highlighting fragmented care pathways and the need for a more comprehensive approach to menstrual health. National data support the findings, with over half (52.7%) of gynaecological consultations in public healthcare in 2021 being first-time visits, suggesting systemic issues in long-term care. These results underline the importance of improving access, continuity, and clinical responses to menstrual health concerns. The study calls for healthcare system and policies that acknowledge the complexity of menstrual experiences and ensure adequate support across, particularly in public systems.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Open Innovation and Corporate Innovation Hubs: exploratory analysis(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Ciocia, Nicole[EN] The study investigates the emergence and characteristics of Corporate Innovation Hubs (CIHs) in Italy. Despite their growing prevalence and importance in driving innovation, significant gaps remain in the literature regarding their distinctive features, operational dynamics, and impacts. Anchored in the Open Innovation (OI) framework—which emphasizes collaboration and knowledge exchange— this pilot studies these gaps by analyzing selected Italian CIHs through a mixed-methods approach.The research included a desk analysis to map Italian CIHs and three semi-structured interviews to explore their structures, activities, and challenges. The findings reveal that there is no single, universal approach to adopting OI. Instead, companies leverage CIHs in diverse ways, with varying strategies and objectives, positioning these hubs as flexible catalysts for innovation tailored to their specific needs.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Foreign Inventors and Environmental-Related Technologies: The Case of US MSAs(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Viola, Salvatore; Moreno, Rosina; Miguelez, Ernest; Consoli, Davide; Perruchas, François[EN] Recent publications from the IPCC and UNEP emphasize that global efforts to adapt to and mitigate climate change often fall short while its effects continue to worsen. One important contribution made to the fight against climate change is the development and deployment of environmental-related – or green – technologies (GT). While research investigating the characteristics of GTs has been growing, many questions remain unanswered. One area in need of further investigation concerns the role of agency.That is, who is responsible for the production of environmental-related technologies. Over the past decade, many studies relating to innovation have focused on foreign inventors. Foreign inventors act as international carriers of knowledge, promoting the development of new and unrelated technologies, such as green technologies. The present study aims to investigate the agency of US-based foreign inventors in regional GT diffusion and diversification using patent data from the USPTO. To do so, we leverage the patenting portfolios of inventors and their countries of origin to explain variations in innovative performance and specialization across US metropolitan statistical areas between the years 1990 and 2012. Evidence from previous literature would suggest that foreign inventors drive GT diffusion, however, their role in GT diversification is less clear. At the same time, both relationships may depend on the maturity of individual technologies highlighting that the contribution of foreign inventors is particularly influential at the earliest and latest stages along the GT life cycle.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Nasty pleasures: xenovisuality and schizo eroticism in trans-species pornography(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Méndez Lozano, Sara[EN] The present research aims to study phenomenologically the irruption and rise of (xeno)pornographic search categories such as “Furry”, “Pet play” and “Anthro”, in 3 differentiated fields of pornographic production: in mainstream pornography through the Pornhub platform, in the underground pornography of the Deep web and in the postporn movement. The aim is to carry out an analysis of pornographic xenovisuality in three spaces with different audiences and social reception in dialogue with the level of repression and/or cultural acceptance.The research is organised along three thematic axes that interrelate and interrogate each other: posthumanism, sexuality and xenovisuality. The posthuman question emerges from the inevitable hybridisation and questioning of the material and symbolic limits of the human present in the trans-species erotic relationship. Understanding the trans-species as any practice, identity or relationship that exceeds the - socio-historically understood as - human, a trans-species eroticism or sexuality would include those erotic relationships that include machinic, fictitious and/or animal elements.The relationship between sexuality and humanity appears as a fundamental object of study with the intention of clarifying and reviewing how historically both categories have mutually determined each other. To be read as a desiring subject functions as the gateway to a regime of humanity founded on the capacity to exercise domination in the erotic-symbolic relation. Offering the non-human the possibility of being, firstly, object and, secondly, subject of desire, radically reconfigures our conception of the human, its relations, its identity and its sexuality. The relocation of these elements opens the door to destabilising - as the xeno and queer movements do - deeply binary, colonial and speciesist human behaviours and structures.Xenovisuality, on the other hand, refers to new queer ways of looking and being looked at. Understanding the image as a privileged social code of high pulsional charge in what we know today as scopic capitalism, the audiovisual analysis of the xeno is presented as an innovative technique appropriate to the digital context. Finally, interrelating these three categories allows us to formulate the research question: how is the xenovisuality of trans-species pornography reconfiguring the regime of humanity and its socio-political implications?Queer and crip theories become complicit in exposing and revealing the transformative potential of the abject, the monstrous, the unrecognisable and uncodifiable. Haraway's cyborg, Foucault's self-transforming and mutating impulse, or Preciado's biohacking, join forces to configure an epistemology of disgust that takes erotic relations out of the wardrobe of human heteronormative binarism. Therefore, the starting point is to situate the cyborg as a non-place, as a mixture, a crossbreeding between categories and bodies whose frontiers are diluted and linked in symbiogenesisItem type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Evaluating citizen science in biomedicine: A tentative approach(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Fernández del Río, Alejandro; Llopis, Oscar; Corona-Sobrino, Carmen[EN] Citizen science (CS) has emerged as transformative approaches to scientific research, fostering inclusivity and transparency in the production of knowledge. The paradigm shift towards open science aims to make research more accessible, transparent, and responsive to societal challenges. Citizen science, defined as the active involvement of non-professionals in the research process alongside professional scientists, has gained significant traction in recent years. This paper explores the intersection between citizen science and transformative innovation policies (TIPs), proposing a framework to evaluate citizen science projects in terms of their transformative potential. By categorizing projects based on the intensity and proximity of participation, the study aims to provide an analytical tool for assessing the systemic impact of citizen science. Through a mixed-method approach, including interviews with principal investigators and expert consultations, the research seeks to develop a robust evaluation framework that can guide the assessment of citizen science initiatives in healthcare, ultimately advancing their capacity to drive systemic change. The findings aim to contribute to the ongoing dialogue on the role of citizen science in fostering a more inclusive and transparent scientific process.Item type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , The FEM-Vida project: applying an innovative vision to the socio-economic viability of small agroecological farms(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Manuel Martin, Judit; Baró Gómez, Laia[EN] Conventional definitions of viability, which focus on monetary elements and productive work, are not enough to fully explain how agroecological farm's function and are able to reproduce and sustain themselves in a socioeconomic context that is adverse for small and diverse projects. Feminist economics allows us to widen the definition of viability, by integrating reproductive work and non-commodified resources and tasks into the definition of labor and economic systems. Furthermore, taking an ecofeminist perspective, akin in many ways to agroecology, entails that in a holistic definition of viability, the measure is not the accumulation of profit, but the reproduction and sustenance of a dignified life. With this as a starting point, the “Socioeconomic viability of small-scale agroecological production: diagnosis and tools from the feminist economics framework (FEM-VIDA) projects aims to develop a holistic understanding of the viability of agroecological farms that accounts for their reproduction even when their financial statement would deem them unviable. The goal of the project is to create a system of indicators to self-evaluate agroecological viability. This indicators’ tool should adapt to the changing and evolving reality of farm projects. To respond to this objective, we got in touch with four small agroecological farms in three distinct regions in Spain: Galiza, País Valencià and Catalunya. As criteria for the selection of the cases we used the following: farms that are self-defined as agroecological, farms led by women or with a strong presence of women in the farm and that they show an interest in the objectives and topics addressed in the research project (interest in engaging in the self-assessment of their farm’s viability, “good-life” in the center...). Within the category of small agroecological projects, we looked for a diversity of farms, both in terms of production, including livestock farms and horticulture farms among other, and in terms of the social organization of the farm, including families, cooperatives and individual farms. The goal of data gathering was not to compare farm typologies, but to build a diverse and comprehensive data set. After building a connection with the farmers, fieldwork consisted of an initial interview at each farm, to characterize the study cases, and two weeks of participant observation in different seasons, to observe all the tasks, social relations and nuances of their daily life. As a novel approach, we focused on gathering data on time uses, organization of tasks and satisfaction of the different members of the twelve farms participating in the project to examine and assess viability and as the starting point of the indicator system. We analyzed how each farm member allots their time throughout the day and week, putting special focus on issues such as workload, overburden or simultaneity. In terms of tasks, following an ecofeminist approach, we considered the productive and marketing aspectItem type: Comunicación en congreso , Access status: Abierto , Building Sovereignity or Dendency? Two Decades of Swedish Research Capacity Building (RCB) for Developmental Universities in Bolivia(Editorial Universitat Politècnica de València, 2025-07-17) Ralfs, Annika; Acevedo, Carlos[EN] Despite its relevance for developmental universities operating in resource-constrained settings, the role of international collaboration in shaping their practices remains underexplored. This study examines how two Bolivian public universities – Universidad Mayor de San Andrés and Universidad Mayor de San Simón – position themselves within international research cooperation, specifically in the realm of research capacity building financed by Sweden’s Development Aid Cooperation Agency (Sida). It investigates how these universities navigate the dual imperatives of engaging in international scientific networks while conducting research that addresses local challenges. The study explores agenda-setting processes across the Sida-supported pillars: research governance, infrastructure support, PhD education, innovation programs, and collaboration with Swedish universities. Our findings highlight a gradual shift from dependency toward more interdependent sovereignty over more than two decades of cooperation.