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Knowledge Synthesis Grants: Informing Best Practices in Environmental and Impact Assessments

July 2019 Competition

Overview
Value $30,000
Duration One year
Application deadline July 10, 2019 (8 p.m. eastern)
Results announced September 2019
Apply See details below

Context
Description
Themes
Value and duration
Eligibility
Application process
Evaluation and adjudication
Regulations, policies and related information
Contact information



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Context

SSHRC and the Canadian Environmental Assessment Agency (CEAA) have launched this Knowledge Synthesis Grants (KSG) competition to stimulate social sciences and humanities research that will help inform best practices related to environmental and impact assessments. Environmental assessment and impact assessment (which take into consideration a broader range of factors, such as socio-economic) are planning and decision-making tools to minimize or avoid the potential adverse environmental effects of a project and to maximize positive impacts and incorporate environmental and other factors into decision-making.

Federal assessments are required for major natural resources projects or large-scale infrastructure projects, such as mines, pipelines, liquefied natural gas, hydroelectricity, ports, etc. that are described in regulation, designated for assessment by the Minister of Environment and Climate Change or on federal lands.

An estimated $500 billion in investment in natural resource-sector projects are expected over the next 10 years in Canada. The proposed Impact Assessment Act will focus on projects that pose significant risks to the environment in areas of federal jurisdiction. Project decisions will be made based on robust science and evidence. By recognizing Indigenous rights and knowledge in project assessments, and working in partnership with Indigenous peoples from the start, the federal governmental will advance Canada’s commitment to reconciliation and ensure better project decisions. The act will also ensure assessments are undertaken in a manner that provides certainty and predictability for industry.

Under the proposed act, the federal government will assess potential impacts and effects of projects not only from the environmental but also from the social, economic and health perspectives.

This shift toward a broader assessment approach calls for better understanding of the ways in which the human and social environments interact with the natural environment. With this broader scope, practitioners, communities and decision-makers face challenges, including which social and economic components to consider and the role they play in decision-making; how the assessment can contribute to the government’s commitment to Indigenous reconciliation; which methodologies to use to determine positive and negative impacts; and what are the best methods for engaging Indigenous peoples and the public.

These grants aim to increase the understanding of existing knowledge in the social sciences and humanities and its application to environmental and impact assessments. By examining the themes, including from an inter-disciplinary perspective, the knowledge synthesis should identify lessons learned, best practices and critical gaps that may be addressed through future research.


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Description

This funding opportunity will support researchers, teams of researchers and knowledge users in producing knowledge syntheses and scoping reviews that:

Applicants must address the following three objectives of the funding opportunity in their proposals:

State of knowledge, strengths and gaps:

Research data:

Knowledge mobilization:

Expected outcomes

Knowledge Synthesis Grants are not intended to support original research. Rather, they are intended to support the synthesis of existing research knowledge and the identification of knowledge gaps. This call is particularly focused on the state of research knowledge emerging over the past 10 years.

In support of the objectives below, Knowledge Synthesis Grants will help in identifying roles the academic, public, private and not-for-profit sectors may play in developing robust policies, best practices, and tools.

Successful applicants will be expected to:

Successful applicants will also be provided with guidelines for completing their synthesis report and a two-page evidence brief.

For examples of previously funded Knowledge Synthesis Grants projects, see the webpage dedicated to each future challenge area.

Related initiatives

Please consult SSHRC’s Funding search tool to learn more about specific joint initiatives.


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Themes

The questions provided below are illustrative of, rather than restrictive to, the broad issues that encompass a given topic. Additional relevant issues and subquestions are welcomed. The themes are interconnected, and researchers may combine themes or subquestions.

Socio-economic effects

Gender-based analysis plus

Sustainability

Indigenous partnership and engagement

Public participation and transparency

Regional and strategic assessment

The call for proposals invites applications from researchers in any discipline that may inform and contribute to the objectives of this funding opportunity. Researchers may choose to address themes and subquestions from the perspective of a particular discipline, or may address them through interdisciplinary or collaborative research approaches; using quantitative or qualitative research, or mixed methods; or using international comparisons, gender-based analyses or institutional perspectives.

This Knowledge Synthesis Grants funding opportunity is guided by the following perspectives:


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Value and duration

Knowledge Synthesis Grants are one-year grants worth up to $30,000. However, all synthesis reports must be completed by March 2020. Up to 13 grants may be awarded.

By applying for this funding opportunity, successful applicants consent to SSHRC sharing the resulting synthesis report with other interested organizations and individuals.


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Eligibility

Subject matter

Knowledge Synthesis Grant proposals may involve any of the disciplines and approaches or subject areas eligible for SSHRC funding. Please see Subject Matter Eligibility for more information.

Projects whose primary objective is curriculum development are not eligible for funding under this funding opportunity.

Applicants

Applicants must be affiliated with an eligible Canadian institution before funding can be released. Researchers who maintain an affiliation with a Canadian postsecondary institution, but whose primary affiliation is with a non-Canadian postsecondary institution, are not eligible to be applicants.

See Institutions below for more information on institutional eligibility requirements and processes for Knowledge Synthesis Grants.

Applicants who have received a SSHRC grant of any type but who have failed to submit an end of grant report by the deadline specified in their Notice of Award are not eligible to apply for this or any other SSHRC grant until they have submitted the report.

Postdoctoral researchers are eligible to be applicants if they have established a formal affiliation with an eligible institution at the time of application and maintain such an affiliation for the duration of the grant period.

Institutions

Grant funds may only be administered by an eligible Canadian institution. Institutions proposing to administer a grant awarded under this funding opportunity must hold or obtain institutional eligibility. Please see SSHRC’s list of eligible institutions.

Indigenous not-for-profit organizations being assessed for or holding institutional eligibility to administer multiple grants over a five-year period are eligible to apply. Institutional eligibility must be obtained before funding is released.

Institutions may contact Corporate Strategy and Performance if they have questions about institutional eligibility.

Co-applicants

An individual (including postdoctoral researchers) is eligible to be a co-applicant if they are affiliated formally with any of the following:

Collaborators

Any individual who makes a significant contribution to the project is eligible to be a collaborator. Collaborators do not need to be affiliated with an eligible Canadian postsecondary institution.

Note that individuals from the private sector or federal government may participate only as collaborators.

Multiple applications and holding multiple awards

Please see SSHRC’s regulations regarding multiple applications and holding multiple awards for more information.

Monitoring

Grant holders will be expected to report on the use of grant funds, on funded activities undertaken during the grant period and on outcomes. Successful applicants will be informed of reporting requirements upon receiving their Notice of Award.


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Application process

Applications must be emailed as a .pdf file attachment, using the following format:

Applications must include the following:

All application materials must be submitted in .pdf format and be received by 8:00 p.m. (eastern), July 10, 2019.

Email complete applications to KSG-SSC@sshrc-crsh.gc.ca. Applications submitted in whole or in part by other means will not be considered.


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Evaluation and adjudication

Applications are adjudicated, and available funds awarded, through a merit review process. SSHRC bases funding decisions on the recommendations of the adjudication committee and on the funds available. Committee discussions are guided by the principle of minimum essential funding.

SSHRC’s goal, through this funding opportunity, is to support syntheses covering a range of the subthemes outlined within each of the broad thematic areas, as set out above.

Please note that grants may not necessarily be allocated evenly across subthemes; and, where there are value-added differences in approach and coverage, more than one grant may be allocated to a single subtheme. In addition to using the criteria below, the overall coverage of themes among recommended applications will be taken into consideration, to ensure a broad distribution of topics will be addressed.

Knowledge Synthesis Grants are not intended to support original research. Rather, they are intended to support the synthesis of existing research knowledge and the identification of knowledge gaps.

SSHRC’s Guidelines for the Merit Review of Indigenous Research are relevant for researchers and students preparing SSHRC applications related to Indigenous research. SSHRC provides these guidelines to merit reviewers to help build understanding of Indigenous research and research-related activities, and to assist committee members in interpreting SSHRC’s specific evaluation criteria in the context of Indigenous research. SSHRC relies on a community of merit reviewers with experience and expertise in Indigenous research to judge the extent to which the guidelines may be applied to a particular research proposal. The guidelines may also be of use to external assessors, postsecondary institutions and partner organizations that support Indigenous research.

Evaluation criteria and scoring

The following criteria and scoring scheme are used to evaluate applications:

Challenge—The aim and importance of the endeavour (40%):

Feasibility—The plan to achieve excellence (30%):

Capability—The expertise to succeed (30%):

Scoring table

Adjudication committee members assign a score for each of the three criteria above, based on the following scoring table. The appropriate weighting is then applied to arrive at a final score. Applications must receive a score of 3.0 or higher for each of the three criteria in order to be recommended for funding.

Score Descriptor
5-6 Very good to excellent
4-4.9 Good to very good
3-3.9 Satisfactory to good
Below 3 Unsatisfactory

Communication of results

SSHRC informs all applicants in writing of the outcome of their applications within the month following adjudication.


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Regulations, policies and related information

SSHRC reserves the right to determine the eligibility of applications based on the information included. SSHRC also reserves the right to interpret the regulations and policies governing its funding opportunities.

All applicants and grant holders must comply with the Regulations Governing Grant Applications and with the regulations set out in the Tri-Agency Financial Administration Guide.

Grant holders must also comply with the Tri-Agency Open Access Policy on Publications. See SSHRC’s Open Access overview for more information. SSHRC also encourages researchers to manage, in accordance with both research community standards and best practices, data arising from their research.

Guidelines and related support material

All applicants for SSHRC funding should consult the following guidelines while preparing their applications.

Successful applicants will be required to share the results of their project with SSHRC and CEAA. SSHRC will use this information to develop its policies and practices. It may also share this information with other interested sectors of the Government of Canada, as well as with other organizations. This does not in any way limit how researchers may otherwise publish or use the results of their research.

Privacy notice

SSHRC is responsible for complying with the Privacy Act, and all information collected by SSHRC is subject to, and governed in accordance with, this Act. SSHRC is committed to the protection of the personal information under its control. The personal information that you provide is collected by the agency under the authority of the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council Act, and stored in the SSHRC personal information bank PPU 055, as described in Info Source. The information is used in accordance with the Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act.

Only the information needed to deliver, administer and promote the Knowledge Synthesis Grants competition and awards is collected. This may include sharing application information with other agencies and departments of the Government of Canada, as well as with other organizations, that are specifically interested in supporting the research and related activities generated through Knowledge Synthesis Grants awards and with which SSHRC has established agreements. SSHRC will contact you to obtain your consent prior to any use or disclosure of personal information in a manner not outlined above or on Info Source. For more specific information about the organizations/institutions involved in this Knowledge Synthesis Grants competition, please contact SSHRC program staff.

Further details on the use and disclosure of the information collected by SSHRC are available under Collection, Use and Disclosure of Personal Information.

In addition to protecting your personal information, the Privacy Act gives you the right to request access to and correction of your personal information. For more information about these rights, or about our privacy practices, please contact the SSHRC Access to Information and Privacy manager at 613-992-1058 or ATIP-AIPRP@sshrc-crsh.gc.ca. You also have the right to file a complaint with the Privacy Commissioner of Canada if you think your personal information has been handled improperly.


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Contact information

For more information about this funding opportunity, please contact:

Email: KSG-SSC@sshrc-crsh.gc.ca
Tel.: 343-552-9333

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