Joint Research Center (JRC)

About this programme

Located across five different EU countries in six sites (Brussels, Geel, Ispra, Karlsruhe, Petten and Sevilla) the JRC hosts specialist laboratories and unique research facilities and is home to thousands of scientists working to support the EU policy.

Working in close cooperation with policy Directorates-General, the JRC addresses key societal challenges while stimulating innovation through developing new methods, tools and standards, and sharing its know-how with the Member States, the scientific community and international partners. The JRC collaborates with over a thousand organisations worldwide whose scientists have access to many JRC facilities through various collaboration agreements. The activities of JRC are largely funded through the EU’s budget for Research and Innovation.

Click to read more 
Hide text 

Your NCP contact for this programme

Image of Sarah Stroobants

Sarah Stroobants

sarah.stroobants@fwo.be

+32 2 550 15 64

Latest news

Upcoming events

No events that are specifically related to Joint Research Center (JRC) were found. Check the full calendar.

Work Programme & Calls

We offer a handy Excel file, weekly updated, containing an up-to-date overview of the Horizon Europe calls. call topics overview

Infosheets

Infosheets contain edited content on aspects related to this programme. They are reviewed at least yearly.

    No infosheets available for this domain

Related links

Related links are easy pointers towards external information. We curate the list, but are not liable for the destinations.

Documents

Documents contain additional information related to this programme, and are similar to related links.

Testimonial

image of Methylomic – Hope & Improved outcomes for Crohn’s disease patients across Europe

Methylomic – Hope & Improved outcomes for Crohn’s disease patients across Europe

The METHYLOMIC project, ‘targeting hope for personalised medicine in immune-mediated inflammatory diseases’ obtained funding from Horizon Europe’s Health Cluster. The project aims to personalise treatment allocation and enhance the effectiveness of medications for chronic immune-mediated diseases such as Crohn’s disease, rheumatoid arthritis, and psoriasis. BIRD, the Belgian inflammatory bowel disease research and development group, is a partner in the project and is involved in the OmiCrohn trial, a prospective randomised clinical trial for individualised therapy in Crohn’s disease patients. With BIRD’s active role in this trial, the project is set to deliver predictive, biomarker-based therapies that bring renewed hope for Crohn’s disease patients across Europe.