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The original version was signed by
The Honourable Tony Clement
Minister of Industry
Table of Contents
I: DEPARTMENTAL OVERVIEW
1.1 Raison d'Être
1.2 Responsibilities
1.3 Strategic Outcomes and Program Activity Architecture for 2010-11
1.4 Program Activity Architecture Crosswalk
1.5 Planning Summary
1.6 Planning Summary Tables
1.7 Contribution of Priorities to Strategic Outcomes
1.8 Risk Analysis
1.9 Expenditure Profile
1.10 Voted and Statutory Items
II: ANALYSIS OF PROGRAM ACTIVITIES BY STRATEGIC OUTCOME
2.1 Strategic Outcome 1.0: People–A first-class research capacity in the social sciences
and humanities
2.2 Strategic Outcome 2.0: Research–New knowledge based on excellent research in the social
sciences and humanities
2.3 Strategic Outcome 3.0: Knowledge Mobilization–Facilitating the use of social sciences
and humanities knowledge within and beyond academia
2.4 Strategic Outcome 4.0: Institutional Environment–A strong Canadian science and research
environment
2.5 Program Activity 5.0: Internal Services
III: SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
Our government is committed to positioning Canada
to exit the current downturn quickly and emerge stronger and more competitive in the global economy. In doing so, Industry
Canada and its Portfolio partners will continue to play their key roles in increasing the country's capacity to create jobs
and economic growth–for next year and the next decade.
While the recession originated beyond our borders, it had real consequences for Canadians and Canadian business. And despite
improving conditions, there is work to be done. In 2010, a major focus will be completing the stimulus measures of
Canada's Economic Action Plan.
Introduced in Budget 2009, the Plan's full effect will be felt in 2010–11, and its measures will help solidify the recovery.
Over this period, Industry Canada and its Portfolio partners will work with industries and sectors hit hardest by the recession. Initiatives will include activities to boost community economic development and to extend broadband infrastructure to underserved or unserved areas across the country. To build on the momentum gained through our past investments in science and technology, significant effort will be directed to shaping the knowledge-based economy.
Industry Canada will also focus on supporting business and industry to capitalize on emerging opportunities at home and abroad. Getting our economic frameworks right, through forward-looking policies, is central to ensuring Canada's place in the global marketplace. We remain committed to two-way trade and investment, which raises our capacity to create jobs and economic growth and provides for sustainable prosperity.
In 2010–11, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC) will provide students with fellowships and training opportunities, thereby contributing to the strength and flexibility of the workforce, and will award prestigious research chairs to expand our capacity in priority areas. It will fund research and build on prior investments in management, business, finance, the environment and northern communities. SSHRC will also renew its program architecture to further benefit society.
I will work with my colleagues, the private sector and other governments to advance the recovery and build the foundation for a strong, competitive economy.
It is my pleasure to present this year's Report on Plans and Priorities for the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council.
Tony Clement
Minister of Industry
Social sciences and humanities research advances knowledge and builds understanding about individuals and groups both in Canada and throughout the world. It informs us about who we are, how and where we live, what we create and why we act the way we do. In short, it tells us what it is to be human. Through research funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), Canadians are better informed about themselves and the world around them.
In this way, the social sciences and humanities play an important role within Canada's science, technology and innovation system. SSHRC-funded researchers contribute to important developments in environmental, economic and wellness research. The work they do addresses the critical social, cultural and political issues facing Canadians, and leads to innovations in products, services and technology. SSHRC's strategic outcomes, linked to its ambitions of quality, connections and impact, help implement the federal science and technology (S&T) strategy, Mobilizing Science and Technology to Canada's Advantage. SSHRC supports:
SSHRC also actively contributes to the S&T strategy's priority research areas and activities. SSHRC's support for people, research and knowledge mobilization ensures a strong supply of expertise to a broad spectrum of disciplines, including law, design, marketing, finance and business. These experts draw on their training in the social sciences and humanities and on the results of the latest research to translate knowledge into commercial applications.
SSHRC researchers are further engaged in work related to many of the subpriorities identified by the Science, Technology and Innovation Council in 2008. Areas of application include research about water supply and security, climate change adaptation, new media and communications, the Arctic, and Canada's aging population.
Consistent with the S&T strategy, SSHRC encourages partnerships and increasingly supports researchers working with their counterparts from other disciplines, including engineering and the natural and health sciences, and from other branches of the economy, such as the private, public and not-for-profit sectors. An enhanced ability to support collaborative research is one of the key goals of SSHRC's program architecture renewal, now underway.
SSHRC is an agency that reports to Parliament through the Minister of Industry. It was created through an act of Parliament in 1977 and was mandated to:
To fulfill this mandate, SSHRC runs programs that provide Canadian researchers with grants, scholarships and fellowships, observing the terms of the federal Policy on Transfer Payments. SSHRC is also responsible for administering the following tri-agency programs on behalf of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR):
Lastly, SSHRC works with Industry Canada and with NSERC and CIHR to support Networks of Centres of Excellence initiatives.
Note: Internal Services is a separate program activity, but is not linked to a strategic outcome. Activities falling under Internal Services include:
The title of Program Activity 1.2, "Canada Research Chairs," has been changed to "Research Chairs" to make it more generic and to allow it to accommodate two sub-activities: the Canada Research Chairs and the Canada Excellence Research Chairs. Approval from Treasury Board was received in May 2009.
|
Program Activities 2009-10 (former) | |
---|---|---|
Program Activities 2010-11 |
Planned spending 2010-11* ($ millions) |
1.2 Canada Research Chairs |
1.2 Research Chairs | 61* |
*Note: Amount based on 2010-11 planned spending (2010-11 Main Estimates).
Reductions in planned spending, observable in the tables below, reflect a lowering of ongoing reference levels–the outcome of SSHRC's 2008-09 participation in a strategic review exercise designed to introduce efficiencies and reduce duplication of effort across federal departments.
2010-11 | 2011-12 | 2012-13 |
---|---|---|
678.5 | 666.6 | 660.8 |
2010-11 | 2011-12 | 2012-13 |
---|---|---|
227 | 227 | 227 |
Program Activity | Forecast Spending 2009–10 ($ millions) |
Planned Spending ($ millions) | Alignment to Government of Canada Outcomes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
1.1 Fellowships, Scholarships and Prizes | 116.8 | 118.3 | 117.1 | 113.6 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
1.2 Research Chairs | 61.5 | 61.0 | 61.0 | 61.0 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
Total Planned Spending | 179.3 | 178.1 | 174.6 |
Program Activity | Forecast Spending 2009–10 ($ millions) |
Planned Spending ($ millions) | Alignment to Government of Canada Outcomes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
2.1 Investigator-Framed Research (theme area and subject defined by researcher[s]) | 84.8 | 82.0 | 80.2 | 80.2 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
2.2 Targeted Research and Training Initiatives | 23.2 | 19.8 | 19.1 | 18.2 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
2.3 Strategic Research Development | 26.8 | 26.3 | 25.9 | 25.9 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
Total Planned Spending | 128.1 | 125.2 | 124.3 |
Program Activity | Forecast Spending 2009–10 ($ millions) |
Planned Spending ($ millions) | Alignment to Government of Canada Outcomes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
3.1 Research Dissemination and Knowledge Translation | 7.8 | 7.2 | 7.6 | 7.6 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
3.2 Research Networking | 25.1 | 24.9 | 24.9 | 23.5 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
Total Planned Spending | 32.1 | 32.5 | 31.1 |
Program Activity | Forecast Spending 2009–10 ($ millions) |
Planned Spending ($ millions) | Alignment to Government of Canada Outcomes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
4.1 Indirect Costs of Research | 324.8 | 322.4 | 314.7 | 314.7 | An innovative and knowledge-based economy |
Total Planned Spending | 322.4 | 314.7 | 314.7 |
Program Activity | Forecast Spending 2009–10 ($ millions) |
Planned Spending ($ millions) | Alignment to Government of Canada Outcomes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
5.1 Internal Services | 17.2 | 16.6 | 16.1 | 16.1 | |
Total Planned Spending | 16.6 | 16.1 | 16.1 |
Operational Priority | Type |
Links to Strategic Outcomes (SOs) | Description |
---|---|---|---|
Strengthen the excellence of Canadian research and research training in the social sciences and humanities through improved research funding programs and processes |
New |
SO 1.0 |
Why is this a priority? Plans for meeting the priority
|
Expand opportunities for collaborative knowledge-building on issues of importance to Canadians | New | SO 2.0 | Why is this a priority? Plans for meeting the priority
|
Facilitate the use of social sciences and humanities knowledge within and beyond academia | Ongoing | SO 3.0 | Why is this a priority? Plans for meeting the priority
|
Strengthen corporate management | Ongoing | SO 1.0 |
Why is this a priority? Plans for meeting this priority
|
SSHRC has adopted an integrated risk management framework, which takes a holistic and systematic approach to managing strategic, operational and project risk. The approach involves five basic steps: 1) identifying risk, 2) analyzing risk, 3) prioritizing risk, 4) resolving or mitigating risk, and 5) monitoring risk. Responsibility for corporate risk management at SSHRC is centred with the Corporate Internal Audit Division.
While SSHRC administers a significant budget–roughly $350 million for SSHRC programs and $325 million for the Indirect Costs Program–the overall level of risk to the organization and to the safety and security of the Canadian public is low. The key risk area for the agency is ensuring the quality, credibility and viability of decision-making for the allocation of funding. SSHRC allocates 96 per cent of its total budget to transfer payments (grants and scholarships) in support of research and graduate training in the social sciences and humanities. Decisions about awards for most programs are based on recommendations from committees of experts and peers actively engaged in research of their own. This peer review process places emphasis on the quality of the proposed research and the track record of the researcher. Peer reviewers are not used for the Indirect Costs Program, which uses a formula to calculate the funding allocations for eligible institutions.
It is crucial for the Council's credibility that the decision-making process be transparent and rigorous. In order to maintain its reputation as a world leader in the expert evaluation of funding proposals, SSHRC invited a blue-ribbon panel to assess the quality and integrity of the Council's peer review processes. The prestigious panel was composed of international experts in merit review. Its mandate was to examine all aspects of the peer review process, including: the selection of assessors and adjudication panels, the guidance offered to these panels, and the role of observers. The panel was also asked to review the policies and practices in place to protect the integrity of SSHRC's peer review process and the principles that guide it.
The panel's final report acknowledged the very high peer review standards upheld by SSHRC, and recommended ways of ensuring that SSHRC will be able to continue to rely on engaged experts and peers to provide reviews of proposals. The Council is implementing an action plan in response to the report. As the peer review assessment exercise has coincided with SSHRC's program architecture renewal process, it also offers the Council an opportunity to consider how best to tailor its peer review practices to the more flexible program offerings being proposed.
SSHRC has the appropriate tools in place to manage the risks associated with providing grants to research-performing institutions and having institutions administer the grants awarded to researchers. Institutions eligible for funding and capable of administering awards must sign a tri-agency memorandum of understanding (MOU) that outlines the basic requirements for obtaining and maintaining such eligibility, and lays out the institution's responsibilities for managing grants and reporting on the use of public funds. Signing the MOU commits institutions to facilitating the on-site financial monitoring visits conducted by SSHRC and the other granting agencies.
The MOU also states that institutions must have structures in place to assess whether the research to be conducted will be performed ethically, with due regard to human subjects, animals, biohazards, and conflicts of interest. Institutions are further required to monitor the research being conducted to assure continued compliance. SSHRC has the ability to impose sanctions should the MOU be violated.
Additional risks faced by SSHRC are similar to the day-to-day risks for other organizations. These are the risks associated with such things as financial and human resource management and information management. SSHRC monitors these areas and ensures that effective risk-mitigation strategies are in place and updated as required.
SSHRC recognizes the need to practice proactive risk management, and is integrating risk management into all its operations. In 2009, SSHRC undertook an exercise to assess the applicability and continued relevance of its corporate risk strategies. The exercise demonstrated SSHRC's commitment to effective and responsible corporate oversight, and led to the refinement and renewal of the Council's risk processes.
For the 2010-11 fiscal year, SSHRC plans to spend $678.5 million to meet the expected results of its program activities and to contribute to its strategic outcomes.
The graphs below illustrate SSHRC's actual and planned expenditures from 2007-08 to 2012-13.
In both graphs, spending for 2007-08 and 2008-09 represents the total authorities dispersed as reflected in the Public Accounts of Canada. For 2009-10, the forecast spending amounts indicated on the graph include all parliamentary appropriations: main estimates, supplementary estimates and carry-forward. For 2010-11 to 2012-13, planned spending includes the figures from the 2010-11 Annual Reference Level Update plus anticipated funding being requested through the supplementary estimates.
SSHRC received ongoing funding in Budget 2008 and additional funding in Budget 2009 that was limited to 2009-10 and 2010-11. As noted previously, in 2008-09, SSHRC completed a strategic review exercise that resulted in reductions to ongoing reference levels. These changes in funding have resulted in a trend of decreasing reference levels over the 2009-10 to 2012-13 period.
SSHRC expenditures, actual and planned, 2007-08 to 2012-13
SSHRC expenditures related to the Indirect Costs Program, actual and planned, 2007-08 to 2012-13
($ millions)
Vote # or Statutory Item (S) |
Truncated Vote or Statutory Wording |
2009–10 Main Estimates |
2010–11 Main Estimates |
---|---|---|---|
80 |
Operating expenditures |
23.0 |
23.7 |
85 | Grants and contributions | 627.2 |
648.8 |
(S) | Contributions to employee benefit plans | 2.4 |
2.5 |
TOTAL | 652.6 |
674.9 |
Notes:
1) As a result of the previously mentioned strategic review exercise, SSHRC's operating main estimates decreased in 2010-11
relative to the 2009-10 main estimates. These decreases were, however, offset by increases resulting from the signing of
a new compensation agreement and delayed adjustments stemming from Budget 2008. The net result was an overall increase.
2) Due to rounding, the sum of the values may not equal the total indicated.
It is widely recognized that for Canada to gain economic advantage and become a truly innovative nation, we need skilled people who can succeed in a knowledge-based global society. SSHRC's first strategic outcome focuses squarely on ensuring that Canada is able to develop the research capacity our country needs to succeed in the 21st century. SSHRC awards fellowships and scholarships to promising students at the master's, doctoral and postdoctoral levels to train the knowledge-workers of tomorrow. It bestows prestigious research chairs in the social sciences and humanities to attract and retain top researchers. It also offers prizes to recognize and inspire the highest standards of scholarship.
Fellowships, Scholarships and Prizes | |
---|---|
Description (as per Program Activity Architecture, or PAA) | SSHRC offers several award programs for advanced study and research in the social sciences and humanities at the master's, doctoral and postdoctoral levels. These programs help train Canada's researchers and the leaders of tomorrow. In addition, SSHRC offers special fellowships to experienced researchers, and supplementary awards to outstanding doctoral and postdoctoral fellowship recipients. Finally, two commemorative prizes recognize the extraordinary dedication and creativity of Canada's best researchers. |
Expected results (as per Performance Management Framework, or PMF) | Highly qualified personnel, expert in research, available to pursue various knowledge-intensive careers in universities, industry, government and other sectors. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
19 | 118.3 | 19 | 117.1 | 19 | 113.6 |
Note: Please see the planning summary in section 1.5 and the expenditure profile in section 1.9 for an explanation of reductions in planned spending.
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
Canadians benefit from this program activity in direct and indirect ways. The students who receive awards are provided with financial support that allows them to pursue their studies and research. They also gain the skills and knowledge they require to enter either academia or the broader workforce. A skilled workforce also benefits Canada more broadly, as it is essential for growing the knowledge-based economy and securing a better quality of life for all.
Research Chairs | |
---|---|
Description (as per PAA) | Chairs programs support faculty positions within postsecondary and research institutions by providing funding for salaries and research activities. Chairs programs serve to attract the best and most productive researchers to Canada, and to retain those already here. In turn, these top researchers attract and support the best and most promising new scholars and graduate students. Ultimately, this helps to cultivate centres of world-class research excellence at Canadian universities, and to brand Canada as a top destination for research. |
Expected results (as per PMF) | World-class researchers are attracted to enhance research capacity in Canadian universities and research institutes, and to build critical mass of expertise in priority S&T areas. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
15 | 61.0 | 15 | 61.0 | 15 | 61.0 |
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
Canada's future prosperity depends on its ability to attract the highest calibre of researchers to the country, and to retain outstanding scholars already residing here. The Canada Research Chairs and Canada Excellence Research Chairs programs support universities in their efforts to engage researchers with intellectual ambition, a commitment to training, and a recognized potential to make major discoveries and/or significantly advance their field.
The chairs programs are helping to develop a strong research and development capacity in Canada, a key characteristic of a successful nation. Chairs in areas that fall specifically within SSHRC's mandate generate knowledge and promote understanding of Canada's economic, social and cultural life, both past and present; offer students the chance to develop the analytical, creative and communication skills they need to succeed in today's competitive world; and maintain crucial linkages to global research networks.
SSHRC's investments in research result in the creation of new knowledge. As Canada increasingly recognizes the importance of knowledge as a commodity, and as world economies become increasingly knowledge-based, SSHRC's research achievements are particularly significant.
Just as the S&T strategy reflects the federal government's commitment to supporting "basic research across a broad spectrum of science," as well as "applied research in areas of strength and opportunity," SSHRC's program activities in support of investigator-framed research and targeted and strategic research advance both elements of the science, technology and innovation agenda. Grants awarded to top researchers build a store of knowledge that will allow Canada to respond to the forces of change, be they social, economic or political. Specific investments, such as those addressing Canada's Northern Strategy or aiming to improve business practices in Canada, illustrate SSHRC's commitment to advancing the government's vision and change agenda to benefit Canadians. Looking forward, SSHRC is enhancing its ability to support science and innovation through programming offered in partnership with the private, public and not-for-profit sectors.
Investigator-Framed Research | |
---|---|
Description (as per PAA) | SSHRC research grants support individual and team projects and programs of research for which the applicant(s) proposes/propose the research topic and methodology. These range from individuals or small groups working in libraries and archives to large, multidisciplinary, collaborative projects with researchers, partners and assistants conducting fieldwork across the country. |
Expected results (as per PMF) | Investigator-framed research creates a synergy contributing to observable knowledge advancement and dissemination of research results throughout the academic community and beyond. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
34 | 82.0 | 34 | 80.2 | 34 | 80.2 |
Note: Please see the planning summary in section 1.5 and the expenditure profile in section 1.9 for an explanation of reductions in planned spending.
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
As part of the Investigator-Framed Research program activity, Standard Research Grants are awarded both to researchers working individually and in small teams. These grants support the development of knowledge in all domains of the social sciences and humanities, from education to economics, fine arts to philosophy, linguistics to law. This knowledge helps Canadians understand and deal with complex and pressing social, cultural, intellectual and economic issues.
Investigator-framed research is also frequently policy-relevant. The MCRI program in particular enables the use of research by policy-makers. During the course of these research projects, Canadian and international university-based scholars representing many disciplines work with stakeholders from government and other sectors to advance understanding and better social conditions. MCRI researchers have addressed issues such as, for example, appropriate domestic public policy in the context of globalization and governance of multicultural and multiethnic states. Another, ongoing project has to do with intellectual and cultural property issues–a timely and important concern for Canadians living in the digital age.
The research supported through investigator-framed research also benefits students from the undergraduate to the postdoctoral level by virtue of their direct participation in grant activities. Approximately 40 per cent of the funding received through investigator-framed research grants is paid to students providing research assistance. Students also benefit from the rich collaborative and cooperative learning environment created when projects are ongoing.
Targeted Research and Training Initiatives | |
---|---|
Description (as per PAA) | SSHRC develops and funds programs to support strategic research programs, both on its own and in partnership with other fund providers, including government, private and community organizations. These programs generate new knowledge on pressing social, economic and cultural issues of particular importance to Canadians. One particular stream of strategic programs supports research that will contribute to better understanding of the impacts of the knowledge-based economy on Canada's economic, social, political and cultural life, and will help to improve Canadians' ability to influence the future for the common good. |
Expected results (as per PMF) | Excellent SSHRC-funded research targeted in areas of importance to Canadians (as defined by SSHRC, in consultation with the research community and various stakeholders). |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
14 | 19.8 | 14 | 19.1 | 14 | 18.2 |
Note: Please see the planning summary in section 1.5 and the expenditure profile in section 1.9 for an explanation of reductions in planned spending.
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
Targeted research and training initiatives allow researchers to conduct timely research on topics of social, economic, cultural or intellectual interest to Canadians. Research priorities are redefined as appropriate to respond to Canada's current needs and to maximize the utility of research results. For example, in 2010-11 SSHRC will emphasize the three themes of innovation, leadership and prosperity, as business leaders have pointed to the need for entrepreneurs to refine and develop their business strategies, and because Canada has been shown to lag behind other countries in its capacity and propensity to innovate. In this way, SSHRC supports the federal government's innovation agenda and works to benefit all Canadians.
Some components of the Targeted Research and Training Initiatives program activity also contribute to the development of research capacity in key subject areas; in geographic regions, such as the North; or among specific groups. Currently, artist researchers are supported by the Research/Creation Grants in Fine Arts program; scholars working with information and communications technologies are supported by Image, Text, Sound and Technology research, workshop and summer institute grants; and aboriginal scholars and the aboriginal community are benefiting from the capacity-building Aboriginal Research program, which offers both development and research grants. Developing analytical skills and the aptitude for enquiry is important if Canada is to have a successful knowledge-based economy.
Strategic Research Development | |
---|---|
Description (as per PAA) | Strategic grants through programs in this program activity are available to faculty, postsecondary institutions, scholarly associations and non-profit organizations to explore, develop and define new perspectives, challenges, and priorities in conducting research, in disseminating research results, and in training new researchers. Strategic research development programs also help develop related research capacity through the promotion of new modes of research collaboration and partnerships. |
Expected results (as per PMF) | Research institutions are supported to conduct research development. New research and new
researchers are attracted in strategic and targeted areas. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
8 | 26.3 | 8 | 25.9 | 8 | 25.9 |
Note: Please see the planning summary in section 1.5 and the expenditure profile in section 1.9 for an explanation of reductions in planned spending.
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
The Strategic Research Development program activity helps researchers explore new methods and lines of inquiry, and develop new perspectives, new partnerships and new international opportunities. In this way, the program activity inspires an entrepreneurial spirit among researchers, paving the way for future breakthroughs.
This program activity also leads to more immediate outcomes. Programs like the Community-University Research Alliances (CURA) program allow researchers to develop solutions to pressing social, cultural and economic issues facing Canada and the world. Projects have addressed issues important to Canada, such as the recuperation of Dene language and culture, the implementation and evaluation of aboriginal curricula, and the long-term implications of casual work. One past CURA project addressed the best means of preserving digital records. The research for this latter project, which was recognized internationally, is also pertinent to Canada–a country poised to embark on a comprehensive digital strategy. The International CURA program, offered in conjunction with IDRC, will help build knowledge and forge social and economic ties between Canada and certain low- and middle-income countries. Included among eligible countries are several emerging economies.
A knowledge-based society requires effective and productive interaction and collaboration between those who perform research and those who use it. SSHRC's support of knowledge dissemination, translation and outreach creates connections between the research community and the larger community, allows for fruitful exchanges and the cross-fertilization of ideas, fosters an entrepreneurial attitude and will help Canada continue its transition to a knowledge-based society.
Research Dissemination and Knowledge Translation | |
---|---|
Description (as per PAA) | This program activity supports the effective dissemination of social sciences and humanities research results, both within and beyond academia. Through grants to researchers and research institutions, it helps to ensure that research results are accessible to potential users, through both dissemination and engagement activities. Accessibility includes both the availability of research results to a range of audiences through publications (research publishing), as well as the tailoring of research results to the needs of potential users (knowledge translation). |
Expected results (as per PMF) | Effective dissemination of research results both within and beyond academia. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
3 | 7.2 | 3 | 7.6 | 3 | 7.6 |
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
SSHRC's support of knowledge dissemination and translation ensures that peer-reviewed research results are made available to academics, stakeholders and other interested parties promptly and through a variety of means. Canadian and international policy-makers, business and community leaders, educators, media representatives, and countless others benefit from SSHRC-funded activities such as workshops, policy briefs, public debates, interactive technology and software / Internet tools development, and artistic exhibitions and performances. The goals of these activities are to enhance access to, and maximize the impact of, social sciences and humanities research.
Research Networking | |
---|---|
Description (as per PAA) | This program activity supports interactions between researchers (in academia and other sectors) and between researchers and users of research results (in a range of sectors). These interactions enable researchers, research trainees and others to share and collaborate on research plans and results. Research networking is an important part of the research enterprise that is difficult to fund through traditional research grants. Dedicated funding for networking activities acknowledges its important role in fostering high-impact research and innovation. Research networking is supported through grants to researchers and research institutions to fund both discrete events such as conferences and workshops as well as more sustained collaborative relationships such as research networks and clusters. |
Expected results (as per PMF) | Researchers interact and work with each other, across disciplines and sectors, and with potential users of research in a range of sectors outside of academia in the public, private and not-for-profit sectors. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
3 | 24.9 | 3 | 24.9 | 3 | 23.5 |
Note: Please see the planning summary in section 1.5 and the expenditure profile in section 1.9 for an explanation of reductions in planned spending.
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
SSHRC funds networking activities to allow researchers to interact and cultivate relationships with peers from other disciplines and partners from the private, public and not-for-profit sectors in Canada and abroad. Not only does this raise the profile of Canada and Canadians internationally, but collaborative, interdisciplinary and multisectoral approaches are increasingly necessary to accelerate the pace of discovery and to solve the complex issues facing the world today. SSHRC's support of networking activities allows Canadians to demonstrate leadership and sets the stage for Canadians' participation in the development of useful solutions.
Funding provided to institutions to maintain world-class research environments supports them in attracting and retaining the top researchers whose work is critical to Canada's science, technology and innovation system. Program activities in support of the institutional environment ensure that Canada has well-equipped, appropriately staffed research facilities that meet regulatory requirements and international accreditation standards and enhance Canada's reputation as a setting for research excellence. Other activities allow institutions to administer research projects and to provide the legal, marketing or financial services associated with commercialization.
Indirect Costs of Research | |
---|---|
Description (as per PAA) | In Canada, the provincial and federal governments jointly support academic research. The provinces provide the basic physical infrastructure and, supported in part by the Canada Health and Social Transfer, direct and indirect operating costs. The federal government funds the direct costs of research, mainly through the three national research granting agencies–CIHR, NSERC and SSHRC. The term "indirect costs" refers to the central and departmental administrative costs that institutions incur to support research, but are not attributable to specific research projects. In its 2003 budget, the Government of Canada announced a new program to support the indirect costs associated with the conduct of academic research in institutions that receive research grant funds from any of the three federal granting agencies. This grant program recognizes the growing indirect costs of conducting publicly funded academic research. The program was created to help postsecondary institutions maximize the investments in research in one of two ways: secure additional support for the indirect costs of conducting research or support their mandates to teach and provide community services. By financing a portion of the indirect costs incurred by postsecondary institutions and their affiliated research hospitals and institutes, the federal government both supports world-class research facilities and addresses the needs of smaller Canadian postsecondary institutions. The Indirect Costs Program is administered by the SSHRC-hosted Canada Research Chairs Secretariat on behalf of the three national research granting agencies. |
Expected results (as per PMF) | Universities and colleges have the necessary resources, research facilities and services to carry out and mobilize world-class research. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
3 | 322.4 | 3 | 314.7 | 3 | 314.7 |
Note: As mentioned above, funding for the Indirect Costs of Research is allocated according to a formula. This formula is based on the amount of research funding an institution receives. Any reduction in research funding stemming from strategic review results in a concomitant reduction in the allocation for Indirect Costs support.
Planning Highlights
Benefits for Canadians
The Indirect Costs Program is one way in which SSHRC acts to improve the overall climate for research. Canadians benefit, not just immediately but over the long term, from living in a society conducive to knowledge production, knowledge-sharing, and the rapid transformation of ideas into saleable and usable goods.
Internal Services | |
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Description (as per PAA) | Internal Services are groups of related activities and resources that are administered to support the needs of programs and other corporate obligations of an organization. These groups are: Management And Oversight Services; Communications Services; Legal Services; Human Resources Management Services; Financial Management Services; Information Management Services; Information Technology Services; Real Property Services; Materiel Services; Acquisition Services; and Travel and Other Administrative Services. Internal Services include only those activities and resources that apply across an organization and not to those provided specifically to a program. |
Human Resources (FTEs) and Planned Spending ($ millions) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2010–11 | 2011–12 | 2012–13 | |||
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
FTEs | Planned Spending |
128 | 16.6 | 128 | 16.1 | 128 | 16.1 |
Program Activity Summary
SSHRC and NSERC use a common administrative services model for their general administration and for services relating to
human resources, finance, awards administration, and information and technology management. This shared approach has proven
highly efficient. SSHRC has separate units providing corporate services related to governance, policy, planning, statistics,
program evaluation, performance measurement, audit, communications and international affairs.
Planning Highlights
Consistent with the management priorities highlighted above, SSHRC will continue to develop and practice integrated planning to support the development of: a multiyear strategic plan, an annual corporate plan, annual divisional plans and an annual budget plan. SSHRC will put greater emphasis on performance, evaluation and audit/risk analysis activities to ensure that programs and services are offered in a strategic, coherent and cost-effective manner and support a more results-oriented culture.
The following tables are available on the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat website: