Research Projects
University Community Engagement in Technologies for Sustainability: a Social Architecture.
The goal for the funding by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation is to encourage changes in the behavior of ISCTE-IUL campus users to reduce energy consumption and improve campus environmental sustainability. It will combine knowledge of Psychology, Engineering, Architecture and Informatics, involving the entire ISCTE-IUL community and will be implemented IoT strategies, behavioral economics and gamification with the connection to BIM models. The project is developed over 4 sequential phases:    1st stage: Diagnosis of the current situation: a. Analysis of the ISCTE-IUL community's perception of environmental sustainability; B. Installation of sensors to measure the energy performance of ISCTEIUL users (eg temperature, humidity, luminosity, noise and power consumption).    Goals:   1) Diagnosis of community perception based on surveys of the target population. Feedback received will serve to identify the main requirements and approaches of our platform. Indicators - Report with variables, data collection and analysis. Goals - Evaluate a representative sample of non-teaching staff, teachers, students and visitors.   2) Real-time collection of sensor data and respective analysis on IoT platform for identification of patterns and behaviors. Indicators - reading real-time data identification patterns. Weekly, monthly, yearly reports. Real-time information on mobile devices. Goals - installation of measurements in 20 locations (reading energy, air quality, luminosity, temperature, noise).    2nd phase: Definition of objectives for the reduction of energy consumption, taking into account the quantitative and qualitative baseline built in the 1st phase of the project related to the calculation of the ecological footprint (consumption) by individual, room, department, building. Indicators - consumption metrics by person, room, department and building. Behavior analysis and its quantification Goals - Perceived behavior and organization of a workshop to disseminate ...
Project Information
2019-04-01
2021-03-31
Project Partners
The meaning of CSR - A cross-European perspective
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) has received substantial attention in Europe in the last decade. An incremental number of initiatives gave it high visibility both in the academia and in the public sphere. However, there is scarce research on the meanings attributed by the European public to CSR, and how these relate to their values, identities and choices as consumers. Moreover, there is a lack of comparative studies that can help to better understand how supra-national regulations contribute to the circulating representations about CSR. This project intends to examine the current social representation of CSR in different countries across Europe. The main goal is to develop a comparative perspective between member-states that have entered the European Union in different accession phases (France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, and Slovenia), and have thus different time-frames of exposure to EU soft laws on CSR. This will also allow to update the knowledge about the social representation of CSR in relation to previous research (Duarte, et al., 2010, Golob, 2011), and analyze whether it has kept stable or changed in the last decade. A second goal is to examine psychosocial factors that can contribute to identify segments of the public that are differently engaged with the CSR principles and practices. Three factors are examined in this project: values, pro-environmental identity and sustainable consumption behaviors. Crossing these variables will allow us to examine if and how are these individual characteristics associated with a specific representation of CSR at the country-level. The project will allow gathering information that contributes for a better understanding of the relationship the European publics establish with companies’ socially responsible principles and practices.
Project Information
2018-11-01
2021-10-30
Arrival cities
The last decade has seen a significant change in the nature and pattern of migration flows within the EU. As a result one can observe a rapid change in the population structure and interactions between individuals and social groups in cities. Cities of migration are places of inclusion and exclusion. The chilling events of the past year from Charlie Hebdo to Pegida, remind us that discrimination and prejudice on all sides remain important challenges to face. Local authorities need to deal with how to manage this diversity and find the intersection between various areas in relation to the growing migrant population.In particular, local authorities have to tackle some concrete challenges, such as: more difficult economic integration due to the economic crisis; increasing risk of social exclusion; educational achievement of second- and third-generation migrants; rise of racist and xenophobe movements; increasing diversification in the composition of immigration flows (e.g. migrants from either Member States and third countries; both skilled and unskilled migrants).To deal with this situation, the project aims to foster migrants’ social inclusion sharing good practices between project partners, in order to facilitate local authorities facing the challenges and problems described above. In particular, the project has the objective of exchange practices on the following topics: effective use of migrant human capital; access to key services such as housing, health and education; fight against xenophobia; encourage the involvement of the private sector; e-Inclusion (use of the new technologies).
Project Information
2017-04-26
2018-12-31
Project Partners
Aliança para a Prevenção Rodoviária - Avaliação de preditores psicossociais da condução
Project Information
2011-07-01
2013-03-31
Project Partners