April 11, 2022 Issue
The LA&PS Research Office publishes a bi-weekly Research Digest to keep faculty members informed about important research issues and opportunities.
If you or your unit is planning an event, a notice or a funding opportunity that you would like included in our Digest Newsletter, please send these to lapsrsc@yorku.ca.
In this issue:
LA&PS Spotlights
Emerging Scholar: Yvonne Su
Yvonne Su is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Equity Studies at York University. Her research lies at the intersections of forced migration, queer migration, refugee protection and post-disaster recovery. Su’s projects present a collaborative approach to knowledge mobilization. Her SSHRC funded project, “COVID-19: Asylum-seeking in the Epicentre of COVID-19 – The Impact of COVID-19 on Venezuelan LGBTQI+ Asylum Seekers in Brazil” was conducted in partnership with local NGOs and calls attention to the challenges that Venezuelan LGBT asylum seekers are facing during COVID-19. In her ongoing SSHRC funded Connection Grant funded project on the everyday struggles of LGBT asylum seekers in Brazil, Su uses photovoice and videovoice to highlight lived experiences of LGBT asylum seekers, to make their voices heard.
Currently, with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, Su has turned her focus to the refugee crisis in Ukraine. Su’s contributions to the Conversation Canada’s coverage of the ongoing war demonstrate the critical work of bridging the gap between academia, research and practice through media collaborations and partnerships. In her article, Ukraine: The good, bad and the ideal refugees Su draws from her research expertise in forced migration, displacement, and inequality, to bring attention to the struggles being faced by Middle Eastern, African and South Asian students in accessing the same relief services available to Ukrainian nationals fleeing war. Su also highlights the need for a longer-term perspective to Poland’s acceptance of Ukrainian war refugees. In her article, Polish generosity risks hardening anti-immigrant sentiments towards Ukrainian refugees in the long-term, she reflects on Poland’s historically anti-immigrant stance towards refugees from the Middle East and North Africa and argues that “acceptance of refugees can’t stop at the border — deeper reflection, social and political changes are required for the acceptance of foreigners into society.”
Su was also a speaker at the recent LA&PS Research to Impact workshop where she talked about research impact through media partnerships. Connect with Yvonne Su to learn more about her research and collaborations.
Launch and Celebration of Andrea Davis’ New Book - Horizon, Sea, Sound: Caribbean and African Women's Cultural Critiques of Nation
LA&PS professor and leading academic in Black Diasporic Studies, Andrea Davis, is out with her latest publication Horizon, Sea, Sound: Caribbean and African Women’s Cultural Critiques of Nation. In this new book, Davis engages with Caribbean and African women’s art (including poetry, novels, theatre and music) to bring attention to the ways in which they challenge conventional, competitive, forms of belonging suggested by the nation-state.
“I am hoping that this book will build on the collaborative work being done by Black and Indigenous feminists both in Canada and the Caribbean. I offer this book not only as a commitment to Black women’s survival but the survival of all oppressed peoples—as a call to live in reciprocity and in relation across our differences. This is the only way any of us will be able to live in something close to what we might call freedom. I’m trying to articulate a model of living, which refuses and exceeds the destructive greed and material overconsumption of racial capitalism, the white supremacy of the settler colonial state, and the competitive citizenship of Canadian multiculturalism. And, I turn specifically to women’s creative texts to imagine this radically different world—not as a utopia but as a practice of survival—and to consider the terms under which such a world might be possible.”
Horizon, Sea and Sound is a major addition to Davis’ existing scholarship in Black Studies and will interest readers of literary and cultural studies, critical race theories and Black Diasporic Studies.
The book launch and celebration is taking place on Thurs, April 21, 2022 at Artscape Wychwood Barns and registration is free. Catch Andrea Davis in conversation with Christina Sharpe, Tier 1 Canada Research Chair in Black Studies in the Humanities at York University, Rinaldo Walcott from the Women and Gender Studies Institute at the University of Toronto, Eve Tuck from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education at the University of Toronto and Ola Mohammed from the Department of Humanities at York University with music by DJ Grumps. This event is being held in partnership with CRC in Black Studies in the Humanities, the Black Canadian Studies Certificate and LA&PS, York University, Another Story Bookshop and Artscape Wychwood Barns.
Internal Notices
Research to Impact Workshop: Web-based tools for Research Collaboration and Mobilization
Date: Tuesday, April 13, 2022
Time: 10:00 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
Websites are a powerful knowledge mobilization tool that requires time, cost, skills and commitment. Above all, it requires innovation and a strategic direction to create meaningful contributions and engagement with the targeted audience. In this workshop, the eServices Office (eSO) will walk researchers through questions they should consider to determine if a website is a suitable Knowledge Mobilization tool for their project and what other alternatives they might have.
Research Commons Grant Clinic Supports & Services
- Mock review workshop the SSHRC Partnership Development Grant – April 21, 2022
- A new streamlined online application process. Visit the Research Commons Grant Clinic website for more details.
If you have questions or would like to know more, please reach out to George Zhu (gzhu@yorku.ca) or Andrew Castillo (drewcast@yorku.ca)
Notice: Electronic Submission of External Grants through Office of Research Services
Given the current situation with the COVID-19 pandemic, ORS is now accepting electronic submissions of research applications. If you have questions about this process please email lapsrsc@yorku.ca. You can also access here a description of the external grants submission process and the two versions of the ORS checklist.
Internal Grants
Catalyzing Interdisciplinary Research Clusters program : Round 2
The Office of the Vice-President Research and Innovation (VPRI) has launched Round 2 of its Catalyzing Interdisciplinary Research Clusters (CIRC)program.
Submissions to this internal grant program require approval of the Associate Dean, Research & Graduate Studies. Therefore, any Faculty Member who is interested in submitting an application should contact Associate Dean Ravi de Costa and David Cuff, Director, Strategic Research & Partnerships as soon as possible to discuss the proposed project prior to completing an NOI.
Please note that the Faculty will have an internal deadline for submission of mandatory NOIs. Key dates for submission are:
- Wednesday, May 4 @ 12 noon – LA&PS Internal Deadline for NOI – Notice of Intent due by email to lapsrsc@yorku.ca
- Monday, May 9 @ 4:30 pm – Notice of Intent (Faculty submission to VPRI)
- Wednesday, July 27 @ 4:30 pm – LA&PS Internal Deadline for Full Application – Completed Full Application due by email to lapsrsc@yorku.ca
- Friday, July 29 @ 4:30 pm – Full Application due (Faculty Submission to VPRI)
Important program documents and resources:
- CIRC Notice of Intent (PDF)
- CIRC Application Form (PDF)
- CIRC – FAQs (PDF)
- CIRC Program Memo (PDF)
If you have any questions, please contact Associate Dean Ravi de Costa and David Cuff, Director, Strategic Research & Partnerships.
YCAR Opportunities
Essay and creative award opportunities
Teaching Assistants and Course Directors are encouraged to submit exceptional essays or creative projects to the Global Hong Kong Essay and Creative Project Award and/or the YCAR Undergraduate Asia Essay Award.
Upcoming Internal Funding Opportunities
LA&PS faculty members are reminded that a comprehensive list of internal research funding opportunities is available on our new website (see below). This list includes short descriptions of several individual programs operated by the Dean’s Office as well as VPRI.
Upcoming Deadlines:
- Minor Research Grant Application Guidelines – April 15th, 2022
- York Indigenous Incentive Grant – Rolling
- LA&PS Black Scholars Research Fund – Rolling
External Grants and Fellowships
The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation and SSHRC partner to advance Indigenous-led research
The National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR) and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) are partnering on a national research program to advance understanding of reconciliation.
The new partnership further responds to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) of Canada’s call to action 65 and supports Calls to Actions 71 to 76. The collaboration will foster research on reconciliation and residential schools, done by and with Indigenous communities. It will leverage the skills and knowledge of both parties—the NCTR’s expertise and ability to safeguard the truths of Survivors, their families, communities and others affected by the residential school system; and SSHRC’s role to promote and support research and training in the humanities and social sciences.
This NCTR-SSHRC initiative is taking the form of a one-time funding opportunity, the Partnership Engage Grants—Residential Schools Joint Initiative (PEG RSJI). The PEG RSJI will support projects responding to a community’s need for planning, discussions, archival work or storytelling prior to, or in addition to, excavations or identifications on residential school sites in Canada. Projects can also focus on ground exploration, identification of sites and remains, repatriation of missing children from residential schools in Canada, or mapping and preservation of these sites, as judged appropriate by the community.
Value and duration
- Up to $1 million for the June 2022 Partnership Engage Grants competition to support projects related to residential schools.
- Grants are valued at a maximum amount of $50,000 per project for the duration of one year.
- A one-year automatic grant extension without additional funding is also available under this joint initiative.
Eligibility
PEG RSJI applications are subject to the general Partnership Engage Grants’ eligibility requirements.
Researchers can submit only one application to either Partnership Engage Grants or the PEG RSJI in the same competition (e.g., June 2022).
However, the following exceptions apply:
- Researchers who have already submitted a Partnership Engage Grants application in the current calendar year are still eligible to apply for a PEG RSJI grant; and
- Researchers can hold one Partnership Engage Grant (but not for the June 2022 competition), multiple Partnership Engage Grant COVID-19 Special Initiative awards and a PEG RSJI simultaneously.
Deadline : June 15, 2022
For more details, please visit Partnership Engage Grants—Residential Schools Joint Initiative (PEG RSJI) application process.
Special Call: The New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF) – Research for Postpandemic Recovery
Objectives :
- Mobilize Canadian-led research efforts in support of a more equitable, sustainable and resilient postpandemic reality
- Support a diverse portfolio of projects that directly address one or more of the research priorities outlined in the Roadmap (see the UN Roadmap), including any of the UN’s priorities and subpriorities, including but not limited to the “quick-win”, best-buy” and “game-changer” priorities.
Applications must demonstrate how they respond to the priorities laid out in the Roadmap. They may involve disciplines, thematic areas, approaches or subject areas eligible for funding across the three agencies. Eligible projects include short- and medium-term project, as well as discrete phases of longer-range research programs. All projects are expected to have demonstrate results/impact by the end of the grant period.
Projects are required to be interdisciplinary. To be considered interdisciplinary, a proposed research project must combine elements from at least two different disciplines (as defined by a group-level classification based on the Canadian Research and Development Classification). Projects are not required to cross the mandates of more than one federal research funding agency.
Eligibility
Applications for projects that are the same as or similar (in whole or in part) to applications have been submitted to or funded by any federal research funding agency programs, including other NFRF competitions, are not eligible and should not be submitted.
All project teams must include at least one expert in social, economic, or socio-economic research and/or implementation science among the principal investigators (NPI or co-PI) to reflect the socio-economic framework and goals of the UN Roadmap.
IMPORTANT NOTE: To ensure that these grants support projects with a diversity of perspectives and aims, individuals may participate in only one application to this competition as either an NPI or co-PI or co-applicant.
Value
Up to $250,000 per year (including indirect costs)
Indirect Costs
Researchers must include 25% in indirect costs in their applications on top of the direct costs of research.
Duration
Up to 2 years
Two-stage application process
- Notification of Intent to Apply (NOI) stage
- Full Application stage
Deadlines
- Copy of NOI along with a fully signed ORS Checklist are due at ORS no later than 9:00am on Monday, April 25, 2022, in order for ORS to provide institutional approval and forward your NOI to NFRF by the Tuesday, April 26th agency deadline
- NOI due at agency – Tuesday, April 26, 2022
- Application due at ORS for full review – Monday, July 25, 2022
- Final application and fully signed ORS Checklist are due at ORS for a mandatory review no later than 12noon on Thursday, August 4, 2022 in order for ORS to provide institutional approval and forward your application to NFRF for August 9th deadline
- Application due at agency – Tuesday, August 9, 2022
Please contact the Faculty Research Office for information on their internal deadlines.
Useful links:
ORS electronic application process
The New Frontiers in Research Fund (NFRF) – Research for Postpandemic Recovery Call for Proposals
The 2022 competition of the Royal-Mach-Gaensslen Prize for Mental Health Research
The Royal-Mach-Gaensslen Prize for Mental Health Research is an annual national prize that provides funding to exceptional researchers who are affiliated with a Canadian academic or clinical research institution in the field of mental health and who are 45 years of age or younger, to encourage them to continue to pursue their research interests in Canada.
Useful links:
- The Royal-Mach-Gaensslen Prize for Mental Health Research – Guidelines
- The Royal-Mach-Gaensslen Prize for Mental Health Research – Application Form
The 2022 deadline date for applications is Friday July 15, 2022.
If you questions or would like more information, please contact research.awards@theroyal.ca
Catalyst Grant : Crisis Line and App-based Support for Public Safety
The Post-Traumatic Stress Injuries in Public Safety Personnel (PTSI in PSP) initiative was announced in Budget 2018, with a commitment of $20 million over five years to support a new national research consortium between the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and the Canadian Institute for Public Safety Research and Treatment (CIPSRT). This National Research Consortium builds the evidence base related to PTSI among PSP, under the guidance of a Public Safety Steering Committee (PSSC).
CIHR has completed two successful funding programs in this initiative; Catalyst Grants in Post-Traumatic Stress Injuries (PTSI) among Public Safety Personnel (2019), and Mental Wellness in Public Safety Team Grants (2020).
Working with the Public Health Agency of Canada (PHAC) and the other groups above, CIHR has developed the third and final funding program under this initiative. This third funding program will include three funding opportunities following a hub-and-spoke model; beginning with the recently launched Research and Coordination Hubs for Post-Traumatic Stress Injuries in PTSI in PSP (2021) to establish two distinct research and coordination hubs (one each to support the two streams listed below). The overarching design of this program is to build the evidence base around proper support models for PSP suffering from PTSI, using an implementation science lens.
Funds Available
CIHR and partner(s) financial contributions for this initiative are subject to availability of funds. Should CIHR or partner(s) funding levels not be available or are decreased due to unforeseen circumstances, CIHR and partner(s) reserve the right to reduce, defer or suspend financial contributions to grants received as a result of this funding opportunity.
- The total amount available for this funding opportunity is $1,000,000, enough to fund approximately 10 grants. The maximum amount per grant is $100,000 per year for up to 1 year, for a total of $100,000 per grant.
- Of this $ 1,000,000:
- $ 500,000 is available to fund up to 5 applications relevant to the CSPS Crisis/Suicide Prevention Line
- $ 500,000 is available to fund up to 5 applications relevant to the “OnCall” App-based Peer-to-Peer Support.
Deadlines:
- Registration Deadline : 19th May 2022
- Application Deadline: 21st June 2022
- Funding Start Date: 1st October 2022
Please visit Catalyst Grant : Crisis Line and App-based Support for Public Safety Application for more details. Contact Emina Veletanlic (eveletan@yorku.ca) if you are planning an application.
Québec Secretariat for Canadian Relations (SQRC) – 2022-23 Support Program for the Canadian Francophonie
- Value and Duration
- Exploration mission – up to $7K per project
- Transfer of expertise – up to $10K per project
- Partnerships – up to $20K per year per project (maximum of $60K for a 3-year project)
- Initiatives by pan-Canadian organization – up to $50K per year per project (maximum of $150K for a 3-year project)
- Deadlines: check the SQRC website for specific deadlines
The Québec Secretariat for Canadian Relations (SQRC) recently announced a Call for Projects for the 2022-23 Support Program for the Canadian Francophonie (PAFC). The program supports different types of projects, classified into four components:
- Exploratory mission
- Transfer of expertise
- Partnerships
- Initiatives by pan-Canadian organizations
If you have questions about this opportunity please contact lapsrsc@yorku.ca
Mandatory internal deadline for ORS review Ten (10) business days prior to submission to the agency. The recommended LA&PS internal deadline for faculty review is no later than 3 business days prior to ORS deadline at 9:00 am.
2023 call for nominations for the Killam Prizes
The Killam Prizes are awarded to active Canadian scholars who have distinguished themselves through sustained excellence, making a significant impact in their respective fields in the humanities, social sciences, natural sciences, health sciences, and engineering.
For more information about the application process, please visit Killam Prizes | Canada Council for the Arts
Gerda Henkel Foundation – Call for Applications on Forced Migration
- Value: Funding will cover associated costs for personnel, travel, acquiring relevant materials, and/or other necessary expenses.
- Duration: Not stated
- Deadlines: due at agency Wednesday, June 15, 2022
The Gerda Henkel Foundation has launched a new funding program on “Forced Migration.” The program is aimed at researchers across several disciplines: Humanities, Social Sciences, Cultural Studies, Law, and Economics.
If you have questions about this opportunity please contact lapsrsc@yorku.ca
The Mandatory internal deadline for ORS review on June 1, 2022. The recommended LA&PS internal deadline for faculty review is no later than 3 business days prior to ORS deadline at 9:00 am.
Upcoming: IDRC Call for proposals: Women RISE
- Value: up to $1M
- Duration: Up to 24 months
- Deadlines:
- Program Launch March 2022
- Submit concept notes to IDRC April 2022
- Submit a full draft of the application to SIRI June 2022
- Application deadline July 2022
Women RISE (Women’s health and economic empowerment for a COVID-19 Recovery that is Inclusive, Sustainable and Equitable) is a new initiative to support action-oriented research on how women’s health and their work (paid or unpaid) intersect and interact in the context of preparing for, responding to and recovering from COVID-19.
If you have questions about this opportunity please contact lapsrsc@yorku.ca
Application Process: All researchers must notify both their Faculty Research Office and the Office of Research Services (see contact details below) as soon as possible about their intention to apply. To signal your intent to apply and to book a one-on-one meeting, please contact Diana Frasca, Strategic and Institutional Research Initiatives Specialist, in the Office of Research Services, by e-mail (dfrasca@yorku.ca).
NSERC Alliance International Grants
- Value
- Catalyst Grants – $25K
- Collaboration Grants – $100K/year
- Duration
- Catalyst Grants – 1 year
- Collaboration Grants – Up to 3 years
- Deadlines: no deadline
The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC) recently announced the Alliance International grants, a new funding stream to support Canadian university researchers working with leading international academic researchers to establish and grow international research collaborations and projects of global importance that will generate benefits to Canada. the Objectives are to provide support for researchers in Canada to work with leading international researchers from the academic sector, and to establish and grow international research collaborations and projects that have a high potential for impact in NSE disciplines.
Faculty members interested in applying should contact Emina Veletanlic, Grant Development Specialist, at eveletan@yorku.ca.
The Mandatory internal deadline for ORS review 15 working days before submission to the agency. The recommended LA&PS internal deadline for faculty review is no later than 3 business days prior to ORS deadline at 9:00 am.
Research Data Management Capacity Building Initiative
- Value: $7K – $25K for Events | $7K – $50K for Outreach activities
- Duration: 1 year
- Agency Deadline: May 1, August 1, November 1, 2022
Following the release of the tri-agency research data management policy in March 2021, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) is pleased to announce the extension of the Research Data Management Capacity Building Initiative. This initiative aims to continue helping the Canadian social sciences and humanities research community better understand data management, and incorporate data management considerations into research practices.
The initiative will fund at least 10 meritorious Connection Grants proposals per competition for the November 2021, February, May and August 2022 cycles, to support the research community’s development, adoption and dissemination of research data management standards, practices, tools and skills appropriate to their field.
If you have questions about this opportunity please contact lapsrsc@yorku.ca.
The mandatory internal deadline for ORS review is no later than 12:00 pm on the agency deadline date. The recommended LA&PS internal deadline for faculty review is no later than 3 business days prior to the agency deadline at 9:00 am.
SSHRC Connection Grants
- Value:
- Events: $7,000 to $25,000
- Outreach activities: $7,000 to $50,000; higher amounts can be considered if well justified
- Duration: 1 Year
- Deadline: May 1, August 1, November 1, February 1 (8 p.m. EST)
Connection Grants support workshops, colloquiums, conferences, forums, summer institutes, or other events or outreach activities. If you have questions about this opportunity please contact lapsrsc@yorku.ca
SSHRC Partnership Engage Grants (PEG)
- Value: $7,000 to $25,000
- Duration: 1 year
- Agency Deadline: June 15, and September 15, December 15, 2022, at 12:00 PM (EST)
SSHRC Partnership Engage Grants (PEG) provide short-term and timely support for partnered research activities that will inform decision-making at a single partner organization from the public, private or not-for-profit sector. The small-scale, stakeholder-driven partnerships supported through Partnership Engage Grants are meant to respond to immediate needs and time constraints facing organizations in non-academic sectors. To access an application form and full instructions, log into your SSHRC account. If you have questions about this opportunity please contact lapsrsc@yorku.ca.
The mandatory internal deadline for ORS review is by 9:00 am on the agency deadline. The recommended LA&PS internal deadline for faculty review is by 9:00 am two (2) working days prior to submission to the agency.
NSERC Alliance-Mitacs Accelerate Grants
- Value: Standard Alliance Option 1 values apply: min $20K/year – max $1M/year
- Duration: Up to 5 years
- Deadline: rolling
NSERC in partnership with Mitacs is pleased to announce a new joint initiative: NSERC Alliance-Mitacs Accelerate Grants that will support the R&D efforts of Canadian university researchers and their partners while supporting highly qualified personnel including students and/or postdoctoral fellows. The new opportunity is being offered through NSERC’s Alliance grants and Mitac’s Accelerate programs. If you have questions about this opportunity please contact Emina Veletanlic, Grant Development Specialist at eveletan@yorku.ca.
The mandatory internal deadline for ORS review is by 9:00 am two (2) working days prior to submission to the agency. The recommended LA&PS internal deadline for faculty review is by 9:00 am five (5) working days prior to submission to the agency.
NSERC – Alliance Grants: Option 2
- Value: over $30,000 to $100,000 per year
- Duration: 1 to 5 years
- Deadline: No deadline
NSERC has released details about a new Alliance Option 2 two-pager that provides an overview of what the NSERC – Alliance Grants option 2 funding is all about. The projects should aim to address and are driven by an unmet societal need, meaning that the results matter not just to the partner organizations but also to the public. Refer to the NSERC resources page to access the best practices webinar, a summary of NSERC requirements and more. The results should be broadly shared in various formats, allowing even non-specialists outside the project to understand and use the results. Faculty members interested in applying should contact Emina Veletanlic, Grant Development Specialist, at eveletan@yorku.ca.
Learn more about NSERC – Alliance Grant option 2 (EN)
Learn more about NSERC – Alliance Grant option 2 (FR)
Mandatory internal deadline for ORS review is by 9:00 am two (2) working days prior to submission to agency. The recommended LA&PS internal deadline for faculty review is by 9:00 am five (5) working days prior to submission to agency.