Day 1: November 13

Future Skills Presentation

Day 1 – November 13th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Symposium – Future Skills and Talent Development

Canada’s economy is in a time of disruptive change. New technologies, shifting markets, the rise of precarious employment, and the rapidly evolving needs of industry create new challenges for employment and innovation, challenges which require major investments in talent and skills-building. But what do graduates need? The two panels – one on program implementation and the second on innovative programming – offered perspectives on projections, innovative professional development programming, work-integrated learning initiatives and priorities for research and innovation stakeholders around talent.

Organized by:  The Canadian Science Policy Centre

Speakers Panel 1 – Program Implementation: Peter Severinson, Policy Team Manager, Mitacs Canada; Nana Lee, Assistant Professor and Director of Graduate Development, University of Toronto, Faculty of Medicine; Vivian Nguyen, Assistant Professor, Carleton University, Institute of Environmental and Interdisciplinary Science; Bruce Seet, Director of Medical Affairs, Sanofi Pasteur Inc.

Moderator: Sandra Lapointe, Associate Professor and Director, The/La Collaborative, McMaster University

Takeaways:

  1. Experiential or work-integrated learning programs help post-secondary students develop the practical skills needed to launch their careers.
  2. Experiential and work-integrated learning outside the classroom provides graduate and post-doctoral students with opportunities to learn how decision-makers think, how government works, and how to write in a way that’s influential.
  3. Experiential learning programs are the best platforms to cultivate the skills and behaviours that are in high demand: technical skills as well as leadership, analytic, communication, problem solving and team-building skills.
  4. Company tours, hackathons, competitions and internships are experiential tools that give students, trainees and other highly qualified personnel opportunities to interact and engage with problems and people outside of academia.
  5. Biggest challenges facing experiential learning: an oversupply of graduates; reaching students and economic sectors that are underserved; maintaining the quality of the programs; and ensuring that program stakeholders continued to be satisfied.

Actions:

  1. To meet the high student demand for work-integrated learning experiences, government must find ways to utilize internships and other types of experiential programs. There is also an unmet need for experiential programs from industry, particularly underserved sectors of the economy.
  2. Experiential learning programs need mentors and academic advisors involved to guide students. Tiered models, such as those employed by The Diversity Institute, pair grad students with undergrads, doctoral candidates with master students, and postdoctoral fellows with doctoral candidates and other students, ensuring more supports beyond just the faculty member.
  3. Teach students how to communicate. Training students to articulate what they do in plain language shows employers they can communicate clearly and succinctly. This is a transferable job skill employers are looking for.
  4. Teach students the importance of self-awareness – of being able to articulate their values, to know who they are and what they stand for so they know where they want to work.
  5. Industry must invest in ways to find the right people so they can retain them.
  6. The innovation ecosystem in Canada would do well to prioritize networking strategies for students so they can engage with people who have made the transition from science to industry. Successful networking pathways often engage alumni in partnerships and through social media (e.g., via LinkedIn and 10,000 Coffees) to reach out to people and arrange conversations.

Speakers Panel 2 – Innovative Programming: Wendy Cukier, Associate Professor/Director of the Diversity Institute, Ryerson University; Kamilla Karoli, Senior Advisor, Program Development, Mitacs Canada; Jeff Ollinger, Senior Manager, Early Talent Acquisition, Royal Bank of Canada; Tim Watson, Executive Director, Grants and Partnerships, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

Moderator: Sandra Lapointe, Associate Professor and Director of The/La Collaborative, McMaster University

Takeaways:

  1. Government-funded programs like ADaPT – a flexible, work- integrated program that fosters practical job skills for university graduates – are proving effective. In its first iteration, 88% of students who went through the program found paid employment.
  2. Student training opportunities that include interdisciplinary and international partners (as opposed to investigator-led programs where professors work on their own) report a higher percentage of transferrable skills, and greater confidence in finding employment within the partnered sector.
  3. Research institutions and funders can diversity the talent pool through the use of partnership grants that enrich research training experiences for trainees and facilitate the transition to academic or non-academic workplace settings.
  4. Solutions to many pressing issues require interdisciplinary and cross-sectoral collaborative research.
  5. There is a massive gap between what educators think students need to enter the job market and what employers actually need. A stellar university reputation and good grades are not enough; employers also want recruits with transferable skills, interests and experiences.
  6. Royal Bank of Canada research on skills and talent has resulted in the bank focusing on finding recruits with resiliency, adaptability, a strong client focus and a growth mindset.
  7. Employers increasingly want employees who can effectively communicate through writing; a skillset they find is lacking among new recruits.

Actions:

  1. Good writing skills are a must for writing memos, reports and emails. These skills can and should be provided through short workshops that will help students transfer from social science academic studies to the workplace. Students need assistance in learning to write well for industry.
  2. Academia would do well to incorporate “collaborative research skills training” into their curricula to teach the soft skills of project and people management, teamwork, communication across cultures and disciplines, big data management and negotiation and administration skills.
  3. Create a space for more government-funded programs like ADaPT to teach students “practical but boring” skills such as spreadsheet creation, coding, writing memos and financial literacy to prepare students for the workplace and make them more employable upon graduation.
  4. Employers need to think differently about how they recruit. Instead of focusing on the name of the school the student comes from and the courses and programs attended, employers need to incorporate a space for students who have transferable skills, a variety of interests and students who are growth-oriented.
  5. Companies need to change the way they recruit students coming out of post-secondary education to better reflect what the student already knows.

conference speaker

Ocean Science Presentation

Day 1 – November 13th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Symposium – Oceans Research in Canada Alliance – Ocean Science & Policy Symposium

Organized by: The Oceans Research in Canada Alliance

Speakers: Kim Juniper, Chief Scientist, Executive, Ocean Networks Canada; Catherine Lambert Koizumi, Executive Director for the Mi’gmaq Maliseet Aboriginal Fisheries Management Association; P.J. Akeeagok, Qikiqtani, President, Inuit Association; Laurent Jonart, Project Manager, Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area, Nunavut Field Unit, Parks Canada Agency; Jeff Stockhausen, Industrial Technology Advisor, Industrial Research Assistance Program, National Research Council Canada

Moderator: David J. Scott, President and CEO, Polar Knowledge Canada

Session 1 

Takeaways:

Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area (NMCA) in the Canadian Arctic was created in August, 2019:

  1. The creation in 2019 of the Tallurutiup Imanga National Marine Conservation Area (NMCA) in the Canadian Arctic is a blueprint for engaging with Inuit communities and building a more inclusive Canada.
  2. Tallurutiup Imanga is the largest protected area in Canada.
  3. In the creation and management of the NMCA, Inuit people work as equal partners with the government of Canada to protect the environment and provide opportunities to the Inuit.
  4. Success was achieved through a whole-of-government approach with multiple departments working together.  Having a “golden ticket,” a letter from Prime Minister Trudeau, helped in breaking down departmental silos.
  5. Qikiqtani Inuit Association brought a vision from Nunavut, and presented it clearly and compellingly to the Government of Canada.

There were three main components in establishing the Tallurutiup Imanga NMCA:

  1. Infrastructure
    1. Future multi-purpose land-based marine infrastructure will be owned by Inuit, helping communities become more resilient.
  2. Conservation economy
    1. Through the Inuit Stewards Program, up to 38 local jobs have been secured (e.g., for ecological and shipping monitoring).
    2. Inuit communities are being supported to become self-sustaining economies: they are addressing food insecurity with Inuit food solutions, maximizing local fisheries, and increasing intercommunity trade.
  3. Co-managed governance structure
    1. The NMCA will be governed by Inuit and multiple federal departments.
    2. Inuit culture requires patient governance, a consensus approach, equal participation, job creation, and recognizing harvesters for their contribution in giving back to the communities.
    3. Committees will be established, including an Inuit traditional knowledge committee, to ensure input from elders and communities.
    4. Science and traditional knowledge will play important roles in management.

Actions:

  1. For more information on a viable, sustainable vision of Arctic governance, see A New Shared Arctic Leadership Model, a report by Mary Simon.

Session 2

Takeaways:

  1. Ocean Networks Canada (ONC)
    1. Operating since 2006, ONC produces data for science and real-time operational oceanography using predominantly its cables observatories.
    2. ONC is challenging policy to adapt to technology.
    3. Examples of ONC’s operational oceanographic applications are hydrophones to listen to the ocean soundscape, seismic data used in earthquake early warning systems, and data used for the identification of marine protected areas.
    4. ONC’s Youth Science Ambassador Program supports indigenous community youth to translate science to their communities, and to help put ocean sensors and information in the hands of the locals.
    5. Integrating the value chain of data into policy continues to be a challenge.
  2. Mi’gmaq Maliseet Aboriginal Fisheries Management Association
    1. The association’s mission is the sustainable management of aquatic resources of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. It promotes collaborative management and the integration of indigenous knowledge in the management of the oceans.
    2. Science is being incorporated into management decisions in the sea cucumber fisheries, led by First Nations in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, to ensure its sustainability. The fishery management program includes advisory committees and stock assessments (e.g., surveying the sea bottom after each season).
    3. The association was created within the framework of the Aboriginal Aquatic Resources and Oceans Management program of Fisheries and Oceans Canada.
  3. Industry perspective
    1. Industry often doesn’t know how to engage with local communities and indigenous communities. Everything is siloed, industry included.
    2. Understanding how to align with broader government priorities allows industry to respond and engage. For example, JASCO Applied Research partnered with Teledyne and the Ocean Tracking Network to collect underwater sound data in the Gulf of St. Lawrence to support right whale protection.
Conference Speakers

Day 1 – November 13th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Symposium – Acting for Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in Canadian Science and Research 

Organized by: Canadian Science Policy Centre (CSPC)

Speakers: Ryan Anderson Founder and President, Satellite Canada Innovation Network; Roopali Chaudhary Co-founder, Women of Colour in STEAMM Canada (WoCScan); Founder and CEO, Lotus STEMM; Tammy Clifford Vice President, Research Programs, Canadian Institutes of Health Research; Imogen R. Coe Professor, Faculty of Science, Ryerson University; Sandra Corbeil Director, Strategic Partnerships and Networks, Ingenium; Brittany Grimsdale Acting Program Head, Women in Trades and Technology, Saskatchewan Polytechnic; Eleanor Haine-Bennett Program Officer for Natural Sciences, Canadian Commission for UNESCO; Jessica Kolopenuk Assistant Professor, Faculty of Native Studies, University of Alberta; Karine Morin Director, Policy and Interagency Affairs, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC); Krishana Sankar Doctoral Fellow, University of Toronto; Ana Sofia Barrows Project Coordinator, Equity, Diversity and Inclusion, Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto; Mahadeo Sukhai Head of Research and Chief Accessibility Officer, Canadian National Institute for the Blind; Vanessa Sung Science Policy Analyst, Office of the Chief Science Advisor of Canada; Liette Vasseur UNESCO Chair, Community Sustainability: from Local to Global; Professor, Department of Biological Sciences and the Women and Gender Program, Brock University.

Moderator: Eden Hennessey Research and Programs Director, Laurier Centre for Women in Science (WinS)

Speakers Panel 1 – How Can Multiple Layers of Society Collaborate to Dismantle Barriers to Gender Equity in STEM?
Chair: Eleanor Haine-Bennett
Speakers: Sandra Corbeil, Brittany Grimsdale, Liette Vasseur

Takeaways:

  1. Mentorship and role models are important for young women in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), but for different purposes. Role models engage girls earlier, and are often women. Mentors provide support and advice and can be men. Both are important for making students feel that they belong.
  2. There is a need for more role models and mentors for mature women in STEM and trades.
  3. To achieve STEM equity, academic institutions need to make changes in STEM faculties, in the faculties of education (i.e., in how we teach our young people), and multiple layers of society such as the home and the community also need to make changes.  Basic things like language and imagery that must be indicative of our openness to diversity; e.g. remember to say “journeyperson” instead of “journeyman”.

Suggested Actions:

  1. The Canadian Youth Science Monitor should be re-funded.
  2. Take a holistic approach to ensure that classrooms and professional environments are open diversity (e.g., multiple diversities respected through language and imageries, inclusion of bathrooms for all genders, etc.).
  3. Selection committees (for research, jobs, etc.) need to go beyond just receiving equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) and unconscious bias training. They should be mandated to have an open discussion on the topic before they start any new selection process to help set clear expectations and avoid misunderstandings.
  4. Employers need to be explicit in their acceptance by posting clear policies, statements and/or codes of conduct that are easy to access and have a well-defined and safe recourse strategy if someone is not following them.

Speakers Panel 2 – Minority integration into the Canadian STEM Workforce
Chair: Bhairavi Shankar, Krishana Sankar
Speakers: Ana Sofia Barrows, Vanessa Sung, Roopali Chaudhary, Ryan Anderson

Takeaways:

  1. Diversity isn’t about giving your organization bragging rights; it’s about striving for accessibility, equity and inclusion.
  2. Canada does not provide adequate support or information services for immigrants once they arrive, and many are left struggling to re-establish their careers despite being highly skilled.
  3. Our academic culture (e.g., the emphasis on long working hours, lack of childcare support, etc.) can alienate people who come from backgrounds that place a high value on family time.

Suggested Actions:

  1. Academic institutions should offer universal childcare (i.e., not just for tenured professors), and flexible caregiver supplements for people attending conferences.
  2. Immigration job placement programs should be at least one year long so the employer can properly assess the person’s skills while making a real investment in their training and job integration. This timeframe also allows that person to gain a significant amount of Canadian experience.
  3. The same programs should mandate mentorship from senior leadership to gain a greater buy-in from the employer and improve networking opportunities for the participants.
  4. Foreign work experience and academic credentials need to be recognized consistently across provinces.

Speakers Panel 3 – Better Together: Promoting Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Dialogue Among Scientists, Social Scientists, and Policymakers & Tri-Agency Panel: The Dimensions Charter and Working on EDI Across Agency Sectors
Chair: Eden Hennessey
Speakers: Imogen Coe, Mahadeo Sukhai, Jessica Kolopenuk, Karine Morin, Tammy Clifford

Takeaways:

  1. We cannot afford to leave human capital behind, which is why we must strive for inclusion above and beyond diversity.
  2. Researchers that get included in interdisciplinary teams for “diversity” metrics are often junior, paid less, and do not have tenure. They also often get called on more than other researchers which can lead to unequal labour, especially if there are no other accompanying incentives (e.g., promotion, pay, etc.).
  3. The new Dimensions Charter, modelled on a successful UK initiative, is still experimental in Canada and needs the research community’s support to succeed.

Suggested Actions:

  1. Engage in more conversations around accessibility and the sciences. Rather than talking about EDI, shift to discussing IDEA (inclusion, diversity, equity and accessibility).
  2. All types of knowledge (e.g., community-based, Indigenous, etc.) need to be held as equal in the research process.
  3. People and organizations engaged in IDEA work have to examine and reflect on their own values, biases, inclusion practices, etc. The work has to be internal as well as external.
  4. Go beyond diversity metrics and come up with good ways to measure inclusion – what gets measured, gets done, and right now, inclusion is not measured.
  5. Funding agencies have to examine their support structures to increase inclusion (e.g., reviewing eligible expenses to include elder honorariums, considering ways to pay community members with no bank account, etc.).
  6. Include social scientists in the conversation of how to increase IDEA in STEM. They are the experts in understanding social norms and incentivizing real behavioural change (e.g., Engendering Success in STEM initiative)
  7. Core competencies in IDEA should be something that everyone possesses and should be taught in all environments (e.g., academia, schooling, government, industry, etc.).
Foresighting Speakers

Day 1 – November 13th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Symposium — Science Advice for Foresighting: The Slow Burn

Organizer

INGSA (International Network for Government Science Advice) North America, in coordination with the Council of Canadian Academies

Speakers: Kristiann Allen, Lead, Policy and International Engagement and Senior Investigator, Centre for Science in Policy, Diplomacy and Society (SciPoDS), University or Auckland; Karen Akerlof, Assistant Professor, Department of Environmental Science and Policy, George Mason University; Eric M. Meslin, President and CEO, Council of Canadian Academies; Kevin Page, President and CEO, IFSD Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy, University of Ottawa; Kristel Van der Elst, Executive Head, Policy Horizons Canada; Rees Kassen, Professor, Department of Biology, University of Ottawa

Moderator: Johannes Klumpers, Head of the Science Advice Mechanism Unit, Directorate-General for Research and Innovation, the European Commission

Takeaways:

  1. An accepted approach frames policy options on a quadrant that includes “unseen” to “obvious” (as an indicator of issue salience) along one axis, and “easy” to “difficult” (as an indicator of technical complexity) along the other axis.
  2. “Slow burn” policy challenges are complex topics where considerable evidence is available, cut where effective action is difficult, necessary steps may not be obvious, and public attention can peak and fade if no clear, short-term solution exists.
  3. Information and opinion are shaped separately, so that media reports can draw attention to a topic but do not necessarily shape public opinion on that topic.
  4. Experts on a particular topic cannot resolve policy matters independently. Discussion of a future that is unknown requires foresight, which depends on emotions and values as well as facts and evidence.
  5. Potential solutions are stymied by a perception that the problem lies out of the expertise or jurisdiction of decision-makers, which has been represented by the popular notion of “staying in your lane”.
  6. Decision-makers responsible for managing limited public resources may make decisions based not on what ultimately solves a problem, but what serves their more immediate interest, which may supersede the best solution to the problem. This concept is represented by the popular notion of “getting the best bang for your buck”.
  7. Social media have drastically shortened the period during which the public can assess and respond to policy options, as well as leading to problematic discussions that diminish the value of this feedback.

Actions:

  1. Avoid the politically expedient temptation to provide simple, quick and highly visible measures that may seem effective, rather than a more intricate, low-profile strategy that might actually achieve better overall results (e.g., when dealing with the potential global health impact of antimicrobial drug resistance. Ref: Council of Canadian Academies report).
  2. The resources available for policy action are often already present, but it is necessary to galvanize the political and public will to act. The necessary leadership may be found in sub-national levels of government, where creative thinking can lead to innovative approaches to slow-burn problems.
  3. A time when trust in government is low it is critical to identify voices that add credibility to policy (e.g., office of the Chief Science Advisor).
  4. Learn from countries that have overcome complex, slow-burn problems – and earned the public’s trust – with dedicated support for scientific evidence, consistent values, institutional infrastructure, and public engagement.
  5. Identify and work with policy champions (e.g., policy entrepreneurs) for sustained attention to issues until they gain salience.

Day 2: November 14

Conference Speakers

Day 2 – November 14th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Data for Impact: How Trusted Partners Can Advance Canada’s Digital Transformation

Organized by: Simon Fraser University

Speakers: Carolyn Watters, Vice-President and Chief Digital Research Officer, National Research Council of Canada; Len Garis, Adjunct Professor in the School of Criminology and Criminal Justice & Associate to the Centre for Social Research at the University of the Fraser Valley; Anil Arora, Chief Statistician of Canada; Luba Petersen, Associate Professor of Economics, Simon Fraser University

Moderator: Joy Johnson, Vice-President Research and International, Simon Fraser University

Takeaways:

  1. Canada’s Digital Charter aims to guide policy development with 10 overriding principles (e.g., access, security, consent, transparency and value to society).
  2. Successful partnerships need to be open and transparent, and based on trust, common goals, shared values and a clear value proposition (for citizens, companies and Canada).
  3. Working with a credible and trusted partner who can manage privacy is paramount.
  4. The Bank of Canada is creating more accurate datasets with gaming-like environments called “laboratory economies” to understand how people respond to different economic policies.
  5. Including social data helps to better understand problems at the community level, which results in more focused policies and programming.
  6. Statistics Canada aims to build trust and credibility through its use of the “Five Safes” model – a framework to ensure data are only provided if certain conditions are met.
  7. It is important to have trusted datasets that represent all Canadians (e.g., lower-income, remote and Indigenous communities), and take into account different types of data (e.g., Two-Eyed Seeing).
  8. Informed consent to use data is not always possible (e.g., Long Form Census) to ensure data are representative.

Suggested Actions:

  1. Listen to partners. What users need will drive what value is derived from the data.
  2. Build trust with partners through the co-design and co-use of data, and by demonstrating the value of the data.
  3. More work is needed to evaluate the different levels of security needed for virtual data. (Statistics Canada is currently working on a virtual data shared risk model in partnership with Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation and Canadian Data Research Network).
  4. Data management policies need to incorporate principles of ethical and responsible use of data (e.g., Toronto Declaration related to human rights and machine learning, and the Montréal Declaration for Responsible Development of Artificial Intelligence)
  5. Trading privacy for the public good (e.g., saving lives) is a conversation that still needs to happen.
Dr. Mona Nemer

Day 2 – November 14th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

A Conversation with Dr. Mona Nemer, Canada’s Chief Science Advisor 

Canada has come a long way in strengthening science advice to government, but more needs to be done. That was one of the main takeaways CSPC delegates heard from Canada’s Chief Science Advisor (CSA) Dr. Mona Nemer.

Since her appointment to this new position two years ago, Nemer has worked with colleagues both within and outside of government to improve the linkages between science advice and decision making. Getting there has required “building bridges and building trust”, particularly with science-based departments and agencies.

While Canada isn’t starting from scratch, it is playing catch up with other countries that have established science advice structures, including networks of science advisors.

“Over the last year we considered various science advice systems around world and the needs of Canada and the government of Canada,” said Nemer. “It was my recommendation that we create a network of science advisors.”

Her advice was accepted and today Canada has science advisors in the Health Canada, Environment Canada and Climate Change, Natural Resources Canada, as well as the Canadian Space Agency and National Research Council. Science advisors are also expected soon at Fisheries and Oceans and other departments.

Nemer’s office has focused on five priority areas: science integrity and open science; science advice; science coordination; science promotion; and science diplomacy.

One key activity saw the CSA working with the Treasury Board Secretariat and the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada to develop a Model Policy on Scientific Integrity, which all government departments implemented this year.

“This was my number one priority: to ensure that science is open and scientists can speak about their work,” Nemer told CSPC delegates.

In response to the recent federal election, CSPC CEO Mehrdad Hariri asked whether the CSA’s advice will be requested as often under a minority government. Nemer responded: “My position is not partisan and should remain this way. Governments, whether majority or minority, need to enact legislation and make decisions and we all hope this will be grounded in science and evidence.”

On the issue of open science, Nemer said her office is finalizing a Roadmap for Open Science, developed in cooperation with federal science departments and agencies, to ensure greater openness in federal science and research activities.

“Our aim is to have science open but we (as a country) didn’t provide the tools or the support for our researchers to comply (with new requirements),” said Nemer. “My view is that we need to have a harmonized policy both for research that’s conducted outside of government and one for inside government.”

Building public trust

Nemer’s office is part of an increasingly collaborative, integrated and coordinated science ecosystem in Canada. This includes the Canada Research Coordinating Committee which is coordinating science across different disciplines and agencies. Nemer also participates in the recently formalized Deputy Minister Science Committee, which she said provides valuable insight on what is happening in government science, as well as opportunities to forge links between government and academia.

These closer linkages led to the formation of a science coordinating committee for climate change, co-chaired by Nemer and Stephen Lucas, former DM at Environment and Climate Change Canada, which resulted in new joint funding programs between some government departments and the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council.

“My dream is that we stop talking about where science is being conducted in Canada, and embrace the notion of one science for Canada … that is for one purpose which is to advance knowledge and the socioeconomic conditions of every Canadian, and advance the bettering of the world,” she said.

Another priority has been to ensure that the CSA office continues, regardless of what political party is in power. At a time when science the world over has become more politicized and increasingly subject to public skepticism, she said: “Now, more than ever before, it’s our collective responsibility to ensure that the position of Chief Science Advisor remains for the good of the country … I’m more committed than ever to making sure that this office is going to be a fixture in the Canadian landscape.”

Building public trust will continue to be a priority for the CSA. For scientists, Nemer said this means working even harder to explain how science and technology – even disruptive technologies like artificial intelligence (AI) – can be applied to address economic and societal problems.

“This assumes that scientists are speaking not only to other scientists but to the public. It assumes we’re engaging in a dialogue with the public … that we’re listening and understanding their concerns and trying to explain the knowledge and science in simple terms that they can relate to.”

On the issue of AI, the government has established an advisory committee that includes Nemer, as well as representatives from academia and the private sector, including legal scholars, ethicists and technical experts. For any strategy to be successful, however, Nemer stressed it must include “constructive and serious dialogue” with Canadians in their communities.

“We have a collective responsibility to look beyond our labs and experiments to engage in public dialogue.”

Conference Keynote Speakers

Day 2 – November 14th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Canada’s Future in Physics and Space Exploration 

Keynote speaker: Her Excellency the Right Honourable Julie Payette, Governor General of Canada

Speakers: Donna Strickland, Professor, Department of Physics & Astronomy, University of Waterloo Nobel Laureate, Physics 2018; Avery Broderick, Delaney Family John Archibald Wheeler Chair at Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics and associate professor at the University of Waterloo

Moderator: Janet E. Halliwell, Chair, Board of Directors, Canadian Science Policy Centre

Canada’s continued success in science depends on promoting it more

Canada’s excellence in science didn’t happen by accident.

It’s no accident that Canada continues to account for nearly 4% of peer-reviewed research publications globally, despite representing just 2% of global GDP and .5% of the world’s population. It’s also no accident, as a 2018 Canadian Council of Academies report survey found, that 60% of top-cited researchers around the world reported that Canada is home to “world-leading infrastructure or programs”.

“We are a shining beacon of scientific excellence across the world,” said Avery Broderick, the University of Waterloo astrophysicist who was part of a historical international collaboration that proved the existence of black holes. “This doesn’t happen by accident. It’s because people make decisions about what to support, about what to invest in, and those decisions are more important now than ever,”

Broderick, whose discovery won the 2020 Breakthrough Prize in Fundamental Physics, shared the stage at this year’s CSPC Gala with two other Canadian science stars: University of Waterloo physicist and 2018 Nobel Prize winner Donna Strickland and Her Excellency the Right Honourable Julie Payette, Governor General of Canada.

Canada has a long history of investing in fundamental research, including physics and astronomy. We are a partner in the Event Horizon Telescope that led to the black hole discovery. Canada also supported the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory Laboratory which contributed to Arthur McDonald sharing the 2015 Nobel Prize in Physics for his pioneering neutrino research at the SNOLAB.

Moderator Janet Halliwell recalled “working in the backrooms to try to get original funding for SNO through in the late 80s”. She said that funding, and Canada luring Arthur McDonald back to Canada from Princeton University in the U.S., were pivotal in fostering Canadian science excellence.

Big projects, top talent and collaboration

Another contributor to Canada’s scientific successes has been its ability to attract top talent from around the world, said Strickland, who helped pioneer lasers that create extremely fast pulses of light for a variety of applications.

“If you’re going to try to attract the top talent you must put out big projects to attract them. If we welcome the world and invest, and use entrepreneurship and sound science policy, we can be as successful as Silicon Valley,” she told CSPC delegates.

Big projects, funding and infrastructure are important, but Broderick said the success of the Event Horizon Telescope project is “an example of what can be accomplished when you have a very diverse group of people, diverse both globally and culturally”.

Broderick, who left the U.S. more than a decade ago to do research at the University of Waterloo, said Canada’s openness and diversity are “a shining example of Canadian culture. As an American I look at us being in this very pluralistic and supportive society.”

Another strength is the ability of our scientists and institutions to work collaboratively with international partners. “We’re a group of people that really like other people and our ability to fit into teams is something we should be very proud of,” the Governor General said.

The importance of role models

Inspiring young people to consider a career in science is critical for any innovation-minded nation. This starts with Canada doing a better job at celebrating both its scientists and its scientific successes.

“We celebrate artists, musicians, actors, rock stars, yet we sometimes forget to celebrate the extraordinary achievements that people do with their brains and heir innovative spirits,” the Governor General told delegates. For example, she said “Canada got it right” when it included Canada’s name and the maple leaf four times on Canadarm2 so it could be seen from every angle.

When Canadians are celebrated, you get responses like what McMaster University has described as the “Donna effect”. Since Strickland – a McMaster engineering alumnus – became the third woman in history to win the coveted physics prize, administrators at the university reported seeing a 47% increase in enrolment this year in engineering physics.

“Twice as many women applied to go into engineering and physics this year than ever before,” said Strickland.

The Governor General said scientists have a responsibility to engagement more with the public, to promote the value of science and to inspire the next generation to consider careers in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) disciplines.

“We should all, every single one of use, once a year, for one hour, go to a school and speak about why you’re passionate about what you do,” said Her Excellency, who continues to share her stories as a space traveller with students. “There will be someone somewhere that you produce a spark with because of what you said.”

Fighting back against science skepticism

All speakers agreed that scientists also have a responsibility to counter the growing tide of misinformation and distrust of science by speaking publicly about the value of their work in language that all Canadians can understand. Strickland warned that the consequences of not doing that can be long-lasting.

She pointed to the Golden Age of Islam, a period of cultural, economic and scientific flourishing between the 8th and 14th centuries that experienced a significantly decline in subsequent centuries. She cautioned that the western world may be on “this same slippery slope”.

“Science should never be a belief. Science is data and science is what we know today,” says Strickland. “I’m worried that we’re becoming the people to not be believed anymore and as an elite group they’re all skeptical of us and that’s a big danger going forward.”

Broderick agreed: “It’s possible for societies to walk back. Progress is not assured.”

The solution, he stressed, is better communication. “Get out there in front of the public and remind them why we do what we do … there are benefits far beyond bringing home prizes and recognition, such as making our modern way of life possible.”

Day 3: November 15

dr Sandhya Mylabathula

Day 3 – November 15th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Short Talk Series 

Short Talk #1: Translating Research to Impact Policy – Our Journey in Concussion Policy in Canada

Speakers: Sandhya Mylabathula, PhD Candidate, Faculty of Kinesiology and Physical Education; returning CIHR Fellow in Public Health Policy, University of Toronto; and Science communicator; Swapna, MD/PhD Candidate at the University of Toronto, McLaughlin Scholar, and Science Communicator.

Takeaways:

  1. Sandhya and Swapna co-developed a Pan-Canadian Concussion Strategy, presented recommendations to Parliament in 2019 related to a private members bill,  Bill C-566 (An Act Respecting a Comprehensive Pan-Canadian Strategy on Concussion), and worked on research to inform new concussion legislation in Ontario, Rowan’s Law.
  2. Science policies provide the evidence-based resources, programming and tools to respond to a particular challenge like concussions.
  3. Be a champion and be patient; building policies and implementing laws can take years.
  4. Engage with stakeholders when identifying research and policy gaps (e.g., people with concussions, medical professionals, academics).
  5. Influencing policy starts with finding your passion (e.g., effect of concussions on hockey players), then following up with action (e.g., engaging with people affected by concussion, as well as policymakers, politicians and the media), and fueling your passion about the issue with others (e.g., outreach to youth, academia through TEDx talks, Let’s Talk Science, Instagram, conferences).

Short Talk #2: Mobilizing Change from Within: A Case Study on Gender Equity and Internal Research Funding

Speaker: Elizabeth Russell-Minda, Research Development Officer, Western University

Takeaways:

  1. Equity, diversity and inclusion (EDI) data can be used to inform internal research funding practices (internal case study on Western Strategic Support for Tri-Council Success program)
  2. Promising EDI data collection models are available:
    1. Canada Research Chairs requires universities to implement action plans to ensure EDI targets are being met.
    2. Each Tri-council agency has EDI statements, data collection methods, and practices embedded in their programs.
    3. The federal New Frontiers in Research Fund has embedded EDI sections within its proposal requirements.
  3. What are the gaps in knowledge and practice?
    1. Aside from Tri-council requirements, universities are not obligated to track EDI data for their internal research funding programs.
    2. University research offices are often not equipped to track and analyse the data.
    3. Most EDI data are based on self-report surveys and not standardized.
  4. Her case study identified how university research offices can reform internal processes to improve EDI in research funding:
    1. Implement consistent methods of surveys and data collection.
    2. Encourage and conduct ongoing evaluations.
    3. Adopt Terms of Reference for internal review committees that include EDI.

Short Talk #3: Global Governance and Emerging ‘High-Risk’ Technologies

Speaker: Nathan Alexander Sears, PhD Candidate in Political Science, University of Toronto

Takeaways:

  1. Geopolitics shapes what technologies are produced, how they are applied and towards what ends (e.g., nuclear weapons)
  2. In the absence of strong global governance, power politics may be the dominant global political force to intervene in humanity’s technological futures.
  3. Messages for scientists:
    1. Science and technology are not inherently “good” or “progressive” forces
    2. Scientists are political actors; the “laboratory” is not exogenous to geopolitics
    3. Be cognizant of worse-case thinking: what would Machiavelli do with this technology?
    4. Align research incentives with ethical concerns about existential risks
  4. Messages for policymakers:
    1. Emerging technologies are inherently foreign policy issues because of the global impacts of science and technology
    2. “No foreign policy” is a “bad foreign policy”
    3. Governments must seek to close the growing global governance gap on emerging technology
    4. There is an immediate need for global governance frameworks on geo-engineering, gene-editing and artificial intelligence

Short Talk #4: Wikipedia Editing & Edit-A-Thons: A Form of Science Advocacy

Speaker: Farah Qaiser, Graduate Student, University of Toronto; President, Toronto Science Policy Network

Takeaways:

  1. As the fifth most popular website in the world, Wikipedia provides a valuable opportunity for all scientists to participate in science advocacy by sharing their expertise through editing.
  2. Who edits Wikipedia – and the biases they carry with them – matters:
    1. 84% of editors are male
    2. 76% of editors edit English Wikipedia, but only ~49% of visitors read English Wikipedia
    3. Most editors come from the North America and Europe (U.S. represents 20%)
  3. Only 18% of pages on Wikipedia English biographies are about women.
  4. Editing Wikipedia provides an opportunity to make science more open and accessible to the public, as well as policy and decision makers.
  5. Groups like Wiki Loves Scientists and Wikipedia Women in Red are addressing this challenge from a science and gender perspective, respectively.
  6. Several Canadian organizations have held Wikipedia Edit-a-thons in the past year, including the Toronto Science Policy Network, York University, Ingenium: Canada’s Museums of Science and Innovation, and the Science & Policy Exchange.

Short Talk #5: Journal of Science Policy and Governance: Engaging Students and Early Career Researchers in Science and Technology Policy

Speaker: Jean-Christophe Mauduit, Lecturer in Science Diplomacy, University College London & Director of International Engagement, Journal of Science Policy & Governance

Takeaways:

  1. The Journal of Science Policy and Governance (JSPG) is a volunteer-based, non-profit organization and interdisciplinary peer-reviewed publication managed by and for students, postdocs, policy fellows and early career researchers (ECRs) up to three years of their graduation.
  2. JSPG helps students, policy fellows, and ECRs of all academic backgrounds bolster their policy research, writing skills & credentials.
  3. It encourages them to contribute to policy debates at the local, state, federal, and global levels by publishing op-eds, policy memos, policy analyses, technology assessments, book reviews, workshop reports, etc.
  4. It serves as an accessible, independent, and open source forum for science, technology & innovation policy and diplomacy scholarship.
  5.  JSPG has two calls for papers every year for its standard editions (in 2020, on 31st of May and 15th November) and several open calls for special issues with partner organizations.
  6. JSPG’s efforts are global and the Journal is always actively seeking international partners, collaborators and welcomes sponsorships of its publications. This year JSPG and Canadian Science Policy Conference collaborated on Volume 15, which can be found here.
  7. Graduate students, policy fellows and young scholars (up to three years from graduating) can volunteer as associate editors, providing them with valuable policy knowledge, editing skills and insights into the publishing process. This experience enhances their own changes for publication in top-tier journals later in their careers.
  8.  Subscribe to JSPG’s mailing list to stay abreast of opportunities to engage with the journal as well as calls for papers and other announcements. The journal is active on Twitter and can be followed at @SciPolJournal.

conference speaker keynote speaker

Conference Meeting

Day 3 – November 15th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Building collaborative opportunities with federal science 

Organized by: Public Services and Procurement Canada

Speakers: Kim Juniper, Chief Scientist, Executive, Ocean Networks Canada; Janet King, Associate Deputy Minister, Public Services and Procurement Canada; Kate Moran, President and CEO, Ocean Networks Canada; Iain Stewart, President, National Research Council

Moderator: Marie-Anick Maille

Takeaways:

  1. Budget 2018’s historic $2.8-billion investment in federal labs is creating opportunities to advance and enable collaboration within government and with external partners.
  2. Science-based departments and agencies are working together to co-develop science plans based on shared objectives, priorities and outcomes.
  3. Other longstanding barriers to collaboration are being addressed, including: security rules that restrict access to facilities; and financial constraints.
  4. Promoting collaboration by listing government science facilities and equipment on the Canada Foundation for Innovation’s Research Facilities Navigator online platform.
  5. The University of Victoria’s Ocean Networks Canada has created opportunities for government, industry, communities and other partners to utilize its ocean observing infrastructure by having:
    1. A broad disciplinary base which provides more opportunities to develop partnerships
    2. A data management system (Oceans 2.0) capable of producing data products that support partner needs
    3. A flexible and entrepreneurial culture
    4. A commitment to community-level Indigenous engagement
  6. Natural Resources Canada and the Fisheries and Oceans Canada involvement in the initial design of the observation system supported the basic research they needed to fulfill their mandates (e.g., monitoring Marine Protected Areas).
  7. The National Research Council (NRC) is a highly collaborative organization with nearly 1,000 R&D clients (federal and provincial governments, universities and colleges, hospitals, not-for-profits, companies, international partners).
  8. Increased funding in Budget 2018 is enabling the NRC to build multidisciplinary, multisector teams for new shared, collaborative research spaces.

Actions:

  1. Leverage the whole research ecosystem to enable resource and data sharing, improved access between scientists, and better engagement with external partners and stakeholders.
  2. Collaboration is driven by strong principles: science excellence first; building collaborative spaces; and making those collaborative spaces more available to partners.
  3. Allowing government scientists to become adjunct professors strengthens linkages between government and academia.
  4. Keeping new collaborations small, flexible and more informal allows relationships to build over time.

Day 3 – November 15th 2019

Takeaways and recommendations: 

Luncheon speakers: Canada and South Africa on science and public policy

Speakers: Simon Kennedy, Deputy Minister, Innovation, Science and Economic Development; Daan du Toit, Deputy Director-General, International Cooperation and Resources, Department of Science and Innovation (DSI), Republic of South Africa

Takeaways: Simon Kennedy

Main public policy challenges facing science in Canada:

  1. Knowledge translation and commercialization: How to improve Canada’s ability to turn research into services, products and solutions. (e.g., majority of machine learning-related patents developed in Canada over the past decade are now held by foreign companies. That is a concern in an economy that is increasingly based on intangible assets.)
  2. Challenges are increasingly interdisciplinary: Issues like pharmaceuticals and microplastics in our water involve both Environment and Climate Change Canada and Health Canada, as well as other disciplines such as social sciences.
  3. Diversity in science: Taking diversity into account to achieve research excellence is not solely a social justice issue – it also about generating better science (e.g., clinical trials that don’t consider the different physiologies of men and women produce less effective drugs)
  4. International research collaborations: Challenges like climate change and antimicrobial resistance cut across borders, and have profound ethical issues. Canada needs to be at the table when global rules are being set.

Takeaways: Daan du Toit

  1. Canada’s International Development Research Centre provided significant input into the formulation of the first South African White Paper on Science and Technology in 1996, shifting from a science policy focused on military aggression under the apartheid regime to one focused on growth, development, peace and reconciliation for all South Africans.
  2. South Africa has adopted several research and innovation models from Canada, including R&D tax incentives, research chairs and centres of excellence. Canada also contributed significant funding to the pan-African network, the African Institute for Mathematical Sciences – a pan-African partnership that provides mathematics training to African post-graduate students.
  3. Canadian science is also a crucial partner for the global Square Kilometre Array (SKA) radio telescope project, to be hosted in South Africa and Australia, and a flagship for South African science.
  4. In March 2019, South Africa’s Department of Science and Innovation (DSI) released a new White Paper on Science, Technology and Innovation, which focuses on harnessing innovation to address socio-economic challenges facing the country as well as growing South Africa’s science base.
  5. Canada and South Africa continue to have strong science policy linkages. On Nov. 14, 2019, the Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada and the DSI signed a Memorandum of Understanding on science, technology and innovation focusing on: knowledge mobilization, science culture and literacy, open science/open data, and researcher mobility and exchange.
  6. South Africa’s DSI is working with Mitacs to develop a new program for researcher mobility and exchange between our two countries.