£20 million investment in four partnerships to boost local growth

13 Feb 2024 11:29 AM

Four partnerships to address regional inequalities in Northern Ireland, Scotland, Wales and Yorkshire have been awarded nearly £20 million in funding.

Credit: pixelfit, E+ via Getty Images

Four Local Policy Innovation Partnerships (LPIPs) will bring together devolved governments, local authorities, local businesses and local communities to harness the power of research and innovation in addressing local challenges.

The partnerships will drive sustainable and inclusive economic growth and reduce regional disparities in the UK.

The partnerships are part of the work by UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) to create opportunities and improve outcomes across the UK.

All four nations

The partnerships are:

Diverse partners

Science Minister Andrew Griffith said:

Harnessing the strength of our brightest and best researchers and innovators system will drive growth across the UK, while strengthening our Union.

If we build on the potential of research and science clusters in the areas that need the most support, we can address local challenges and take advantage of new opportunities, ultimately creating hubs of highly-skilled jobs and growth.

The second phase of the Local Policy Innovation Partnership programme will do just that, supporting researchers to continue finding solutions to problems that matter to communities and foster sustainable growth throughout the UK.

Professor Alison Park, Head of UKRI’s creating opportunities, improving outcomes theme, said:

Local Policy Innovation Partnerships demonstrate UKRI’s commitment to bringing together a diverse range of partners, from local and devolved government, communities and businesses.

Through these long-term collaborations, we will accelerate the use of research and innovation to reduce regional inequalities and drive sustainable, inclusive growth.

The LPIPs hub

The four projects are supported by a Birmingham-based LPIPs hub.

The hub will share data, evidence, learning and best practice with the UK government, local authorities and researchers who are carrying out research into reducing regional inequality.

Innovative funding

The LPIPs programme is funded by UKRI and by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), the Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) and Innovate UK.

It used an innovative two-phase competitive process.

In phase one of the programme 10 LPIPs each received up to £50,000 of seed corn funding.

LPIPs used the funding to build local partnerships and work with local communities and other agencies to develop strong, evidence-based proposals for phase two.

Creating opportunities and improving outcomes is one of five cross-cutting strategic themes for UKRI.

Work funded under this theme will improve outcomes for people and places across the UK by identifying solutions that promote economic and social prosperity.

Further information

Rural Wales LPIP

Professor Michael Woods, Aberystwyth University

This partnership brings together researchers, community organisations, an enterprise agency and local communities.

It gathers, shares and applies evidence to local policymaking and innovation, for inclusive, sustainable growth in rural Wales.

In particular, it will discover how growth can be achieved in a rural region where low population density, small scale businesses, weak infrastructure and a dispersed labour market limit the effectiveness of conventional growth strategies.

It will:

In phase one, over 70 organisations were consulted to identify evidence gaps, understand data use, and develop the phase two work programme.

Engagement included workshops in pilot communities, with farming and environmental groups, and with local government policy officers.

The partnership brings together a team from:

Stirling LPIP: optimising outcomes from water resources: raising levels in the Forth water basin

Professor Richard Simmons, University of Stirling

The Stirling LPIP covers the region of the Forth water basin which includes the Firth of Forth and the capital city, Edinburgh.

It builds innovative structures for making the most of an abundant local resource, water.

The partnership will produce new evidence on water’s role in shaping better places to live, improving public health, and linking cultural and natural heritage.

It will also produce new evidence on water’s role in promoting opportunities for businesses and jobs in the food and drink, agriculture, tourism, construction, energy and biotechnology sectors.

It addresses three fundamental questions:

Phase one workshops addressed the partnership’s vision, theory of change and desired outcomes.

These workshops provided invaluable access to the diverse knowledge and expertise across the network of partners in co-developing the phase two approach.

The shared vision developed during phase one significantly increased the membership of the LPIP.

The Stirling LPIP brings together a team from:

Yorkshire and Humber Policy Innovation Partnership

Professor Gary Dymski, University of Leeds

Yorkshire and Humber Policy Innovation Partnership (YPIP) is a collaboration of university, public, private and third sector bodies in Yorkshire and the Humber.

The partnership aims to address:

A key aim of YPIP is to give more power to low-income, marginalised and isolated communities in regional research and decision-making.

At the heart of YPIP will be the YPIP community panel, comprised of 12 members with diverse lived and felt experiences of disadvantage, marginalisation and isolation.

In phase one the YPIP co-developed and reached consensus with stakeholders that it would focus on lower income communities.

Phase one activities also strengthened and expanded the partnership to include the Yorkshire and Humber Climate Commission and the Yorkshire and Humber Applied Research Consortium.

These respectively bring together climate and health stakeholders and communities for integrated region-wide activity.

Yorkshire and Humber Policy Innovation Partnership brings together a team from:

EPIC Futures NI: collaborative research and innovation for policy and practice.

Professor Kristel Miller, Ulster University

The Northern Ireland LPIP aims to become a pioneering thinktank, bringing together researchers, business, government and local communities in an open forum.

It provides evidence for policy and programmes that support the economic and social prosperity of Northern Ireland.

It will address economic inactivity, low unemployment and target the ‘hidden unemployed’, individuals who would like to work but face barriers in doing so, within the economically inactive population.

To achieve this, the LPIP will:

The Northern Ireland LPIP workplan has been fully co-created during phase one and will continue to work with those partners to both design and deliver activity across Northern Ireland.

The Northern Ireland LPIP brings together a team from: