Évora hosts regional dialogue on entrepreneurial discovery and territorial cooperation

Entrepreneurial discovery isn't a luxury—it's essential to writing policy that works.
The closing argument of the Alentejo regional development forum, emphasizing how regions must understand their own assets to align public policy with territorial needs.

Na Universidade de Évora, representantes institucionais e especialistas reuniram-se para interrogar uma das questões mais persistentes do desenvolvimento regional: como se constrói cooperação real num território, e de que forma o pensamento empreendedor pode orientar políticas públicas mais eficazes. O fórum, organizado pela ADRAL no âmbito do ciclo Alentejo 2030, tratou os fundos europeus e as redes institucionais não como instrumentos técnicos, mas como a própria arquitetura que permite a uma região transformar ambição em realidade. No fundo, estava em causa uma ideia simples e exigente: a política pública só funciona quando conhece verdadeiramente o território que serve.

  • O Alentejo enfrenta o desafio de transformar fundos europeus em desenvolvimento concreto antes que o ciclo 2030 avance sem ancoragem territorial sólida.
  • A cooperação transfronteiriça e as redes institucionais surgem como mecanismos estratégicos, mas a sua eficácia depende de coordenação real — não apenas de intenções declaradas.
  • O processo de descoberta empreendedora foi apresentado como antídoto a políticas desalinhadas: identificar o que uma região realmente é e tem, antes de decidir o que fazer.
  • Especialistas e decisores de todo o país convergiram em Évora com perspetivas distintas, sinalizando que o problema do desenvolvimento regional não tem resposta única nem local.
  • O fórum encerrou com um argumento central: sem descoberta empreendedora, a política pública arrisca falhar não por falta de recursos, mas por falta de conhecimento do próprio território.

A 21 de maio, a Universidade de Évora acolheu um fórum organizado pela ADRAL dedicado ao desenvolvimento regional do Alentejo. O encontro reuniu especialistas, decisores e responsáveis institucionais em torno de uma questão central: como construir cooperação territorial efetiva, e que papel pode o pensamento empreendedor desempenhar nesse processo.

Tiago Teotónio Pereira, membro executivo da Comissão Diretiva do Programa Regional Alentejo 2030, abriu os trabalhos defendendo que os fundos europeus e a cooperação institucional não são apenas instrumentos de financiamento ou coordenação burocrática — são o verdadeiro motor do desenvolvimento sustentável da região. Sem eles, a ambição permanece no papel.

Os painéis do dia aprofundaram diferentes dimensões do problema. Um deles centrou-se na cooperação transfronteiriça e nas redes que ligam instituições entre si, moderado por Sandra Jorge, responsável pela divisão de Cooperação e Dinâmicas Regionais da CCDR Alentejo. A discussão foi concreta: quais os mecanismos que permitem — ou bloqueiam — a coordenação regional e internacional.

No encerramento, Pereira regressou ao microfone para sintetizar o argumento que atravessou todo o dia: a descoberta empreendedora — o processo de identificar o que uma região realmente é, o que sabe fazer, quais os seus ativos genuínos — não é um exercício opcional. É a condição para escrever políticas públicas que funcionem. Política que não corresponde às necessidades reais do território é política que falha. A descoberta é o caminho para evitar esse fracasso.

On May 21st, the University of Évora became the stage for a conversation about how a region grows. The gathering, titled "The State of the Region: Entrepreneurial Discovery as a Tool for Territorial Cooperation," was organized by ADRAL and drew together the people who actually shape policy in Alentejo—experts, decision-makers, regional officials—to wrestle with a question that matters: how do you build real cooperation across a territory, and what role does entrepreneurial thinking play in that work?

Tiago Teotónio Pereira, executive member of the Directing Commission for the Alentejo 2030 Regional Program, opened the day by laying out what he saw as the foundation for everything that would follow. European funding, he argued, isn't just money—it's a mechanism. Institutional cooperation isn't just bureaucratic coordination. Together, they form the actual engine that drives sustainable development in a region like Alentejo. Without them, ambition stays on paper.

The morning unfolded in panels, each one narrowing the focus. One thread ran through them all: how do you connect the dots? The second panel zeroed in on cross-border cooperation and the networks that hold institutions together. Sandra Jorge, head of the Cooperation and Regional Dynamics division at CCDR Alentejo, moderated that discussion, steering the room through the mechanics of how regions actually talk to each other—not just within Portugal, but across borders. The conversation wasn't abstract. It was about the real mechanisms that either enable or block regional and international coordination.

What emerged across the day was a shared understanding that cooperation isn't optional. It's the infrastructure that allows a territory to leverage its advantages. Experts and officials from across the country and beyond contributed to the discussion, each bringing a different angle on how economic and social development actually happens when you have the right framework in place.

The day closed with a lunch conference, and Pereira returned to the microphone to tie the threads together. He emphasized what the Alentejo 2030 cycle prioritizes and made an argument that seemed to be the through-line of the entire event: entrepreneurial discovery—the process of identifying what a region is actually good at, what its real assets are—isn't a luxury. It's essential to writing public policy that works. Policy that doesn't match what a territory actually needs is policy that fails. The discovery process is how you avoid that failure, how you align what government does with what the region requires.

European funds and institutional cooperation are fundamental drivers for sustainable regional development
— Tiago Teotónio Pereira, executive member of the Alentejo 2030 Regional Program Directing Commission
Entrepreneurial discovery is essential to shaping public policies that are more effective and aligned with territorial needs
— Tiago Teotónio Pereira, at the closing lunch conference
La Conversación del Hearth Otra perspectiva de la historia
Inventor

Why does a region need to "discover" what it's entrepreneurial about? Doesn't Alentejo already know what it does?

Model

You'd think so, but there's a difference between what a region has always done and what it could do. Discovery is about looking at assets—land, people, skills, connections—and asking what combinations haven't been tried yet. It's not starting from scratch; it's seeing what's actually there.

Inventor

And that matters for policy because?

Model

Because if you're distributing European funds or designing programs, you need to know where they'll actually take root. You can't impose a development strategy from above. It has to match the territory's real capacities and potential.

Inventor

So the cooperation piece—the cross-border networks—that's about scale?

Model

Partly. But it's also about learning. When regions cooperate, they share what works and what doesn't. A solution that worked in one place might work in another. And some challenges are bigger than one region can solve alone.

Inventor

What happens if a region doesn't do this work? If it skips the discovery part?

Model

You get misaligned funding, wasted resources, policies that don't stick. You end up with programs that look good on paper but don't change anything on the ground. That's what the day was really about—avoiding that trap.

Quieres la nota completa? Lee el original en SAPO ↗
Contáctanos FAQ