Why a public-private articulation table?

As part of the actions aimed at setting up what will be its first public-private articulation table, the municipal leaders of the Education and Talent Training and the World of Work axes of the Cities of Knowledge program shared a meeting where inspiration came from Mendoza with the District 33 experience.

The formation of the public-private consortium that provided content to District 33 to position it as a talent pool in Mendoza was the axis of the meeting shared by the referents of the 14 municipalities that participate in the Cities of Knowledge program of the Local Innovation Network.

The talk with the members of the World of Work and Talent Education and Training axes was led by the coordinator of the Mendoza technology hub, Pablo Navarro, and Camila Alanis, who was the facilitator of the process from RIL and is today at charge of Knowledge Cities.

“It is not about quickly answering the questions we have, but fundamentally about understanding the problem and validating the hypotheses that come out in the process, an issue that we are not very used to in the public sector,” Pablo pointed out, to which Camila added that it is the diverse perspectives of those who make up the consortium that allow establishing more solid principles of action and seeking answers from different perspectives.


SEE ALL NEWS