Female participation in high-tech enterprises (Q4295023): Difference between revisions

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Project Q4295023 in Italy, Netherlands, Sweden, Spain, Greece, Romania, Norway

Revision as of 15:23, 10 June 2022

Project Q4295023 in Italy, Netherlands, Sweden, Spain, Greece, Romania, Norway
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Female participation in high-tech enterprises
Project Q4295023 in Italy, Netherlands, Sweden, Spain, Greece, Romania, Norway

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    1,193,043.0 Euro
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    1,611,990.0 Euro
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    74.01 percent
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    1 June 2018
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    31 May 2023
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    Arezzo Innovazione
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    43°28'11.35"N, 11°51'28.19"E
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    38°53'59.03"N, 22°26'1.21"E
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    44°26'43.51"N, 26°7'0.98"E
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    37°59'57.37"N, 23°43'57.97"E
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    43°27'47.84"N, 3°47'44.20"W
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    60°36'1.15"N, 15°38'0.38"E
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    43°28'8.65"N, 11°51'29.05"E
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    43°27'16.99"N, 3°52'5.66"W
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    58°8'51.83"N, 7°59'18.46"E
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    53°11'53.41"N, 6°32'53.12"E
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    FEMINA partners believe that increased female participation can make high-tech SMEs more competitive. This belief, based on academic studies and practical experience, must become part of mainstream policy. The gender gap is still visible in high-tech sectors across EU-28: women represented 29% of entrepreneurs in 2014 and 32.5% of employees in high-tech manufacturing and knowledge-intensive services in 2015. This is not a question of social inclusion. It is about economic growth: studies show that the women’s specific skills can help to diversify and consolidate enterprises; that closing the gender gap could generate an EU GDP increase of 13%. In this context, FEMINA partners cooperate at interregional level to reach their overall aim: to ensure that selected policy instruments are integrated with measures to promote female engagement in their high-tech sectors, with a focus on sectors in their RIS3. FEMINA considers how to identify, implement, monitor and evaluate policy measures that break down barriers to female high-tech entrepreneurship, to employment and career progression in high-tech SMEs and to the gender dimension of innovation in funding schemes for high-tech start-ups and SMEs. Policy improvements are foreseen through specific projects funded to address these barriers, through improved policy management (e.g. gender criteria in monitoring) and through strategic focus, whereby partners work to include female participation in high-tech as a fundamental principle of their policies for SME competitiveness. FEMINA’s main outputs are Action Plans, detailing these desired changes, which partners and selected stakeholders will implement and monitor over a 2-year period. The results of this implementation will benefit SMEs and the territory. An increase in female participation in high-tech entrepreneurship, employment and leadership should establish a culture of gender parity in these sectors, with impact on inclusive growth and regional competitiveness. (English)
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