Deadline: 20-May-22
The Global Affairs Canada (GAC), in collaboration with the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC), is pleased to announce the sixth edition of the International Policy Ideas Challenge.
The objective of the program is to draw on the network of talented Canadian graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and early-career civil society researchers to identify concrete, innovative solutions to emerging international policy challenges faced by Canada.
The program offers applicants a chance to test their skills at translating academic expertise into policy language and insights. Applicants are invited to submit brief proposals. GAC will select up to 6 winning proposals, and the Balsillie School of International Affairs (BSIA) will provide coaching to researchers as part of further developing their proposals into full policy briefs. Winners will present their briefs to Government of Canada officials as part of the virtual Ideas Symposium, which GAC will host in late 2022.
Themes
- Each proposal should outline a trend, dynamic, or research question affecting Canadian foreign policy about one or more themes provided below that applicants believe need additional study. Proposals should sketch out preliminary policy recommendations. The 6 themes below are derived from GAC’s mandate and key objectives on foreign policy and international trade and assistance. The policy proposal must be relevant to at least 1 of the themes provided below. The policy proposal may also use more than 1 of the themes, but this is not required. The themes are:
- Canada-led or- supported actions with close partners, including the G7 and NATO, and/or through Canada’s engagement with international organizations, including the UN, that aim to do 1 or more of:
- Canada-led or -supported international responses that advance support for democracy, rule of law, media freedom, inclusive governance, and/or human rights, particularly those made in coordination with the G7 and NATO, which could include responding to foreign interference in democratic processes and/or egregious violations of human rights
- Applying lessons learned from COVID-19 response and recovery to informing and strengthening Canada’s international assistance in the areas of pandemic preparedness and recovery; you may focus on priority issues, such as:
- strengthening health systems
- the One Health approach
- education for refugees and forcibly displaced children and youth
- prevention of gender violence
- paid and unpaid care work
- protections for migrant workers in the care economy
- decent work and employment in a post-COVID-19 world
- other social and economic considerations
- Ways Canada should further support developing countries in taking climate action through adaptation, mitigation, and resilience, with particular emphasis on the needs and rights of women and marginalized vulnerable groups; you may focus on 1 or more priority issues, such as:
- international climate finance, including blended finance
- feminist approaches
- nature-based solutions
- biodiversity
- small island developing states
- Africa-focused programming
- Indigenous-led solutions
- locally-led climate solutions
- climate change and security
- How Canada can help to build and safeguard an open and inclusive rules-based global trading system that will help raise the standard of living for all Canadians. You may focus on 1 or more priority issues, such as:
- Strengthening and securing critical supply chains
- Advancing Canada’s global leadership on critical minerals
- Ensuring that Canada’s trading relationships are mutually beneficial economic relationships
- Ensuring that Canadian businesses operating abroad do not contribute to human rights abuses
- Combatting protectionism, unfair trade practices, and economic coercion around the world
- Positioning Canada as a top destination for global investment while balancing Canada’s national interests
- Ways to advance Canada’s export diversification strategy, to enable Canadian businesses to grow internationally, and to create economic opportunities through increased and more diverse trade and investment. You may focus on 1 or more priority issues, such as:
- Addressing bilateral trade issues with the United States
- Developing a strategy for economic cooperation across Africa
- Reinforcing economic cooperation in the hemisphere
- Building stronger economic linkages as part of a new Indo-Pacific strategy
- Negotiating a Canada-United Kingdom Trade Agreement
- Advancing Canada’s inclusive free trade agenda
Note: The final product will take the form of a policy brief, not exceeding 3,500 words, and it must include a one-page executive summary and policy recommendations. Coaching sessions will take place in summer and fall 2022, and final briefs will be due in fall 2022.
Award Information
- Up to 6 awards will be granted. For each winning proposal, $3,000 will be provided to the lead (or sole) researcher upon submission of the final brief and formal presentation to GAC.
Eligibility Criteria
- The International Policy Ideas Challenge invites applications from current graduate students (Master’s or Ph.D. level) and post-doctoral fellows at a recognized Canadian post-secondary educational institution.
- Researchers affiliated with a Canadian non-profit organization (e.g., a non-governmental organization or a think tank) who are within 6 years of graduation from a graduate program at a recognized post-secondary institution will also be considered.
- Applicants must be Canadian citizens or permanent residents of Canada.
- Indeterminate and term employees of the Government of Canada are not eligible to apply. Additionally, employees of GAC, including students and casuals, are not eligible to apply.
- Team applications, with a maximum of 3 members, are permitted; however, a lead researcher must be identified. A team application that includes collaborators from other universities is permitted. In the case of a team application, all members are expected to meet the above requirements.
Proposal Requirements
- Proposals should demonstrate your ability to present your idea comprehensively and succinctly, including by explaining how you will gather relevant evidence and conduct rigorous analysis that would allow you to develop policy recommendations in the final policy brief if you are selected as one of the winners of the Challenge.
- Proposals should:
- identify which research theme(s) will be the focus of the final policy brief
- explain how the proposed analysis will complement existing research and analysis on the chosen research theme(s)
- briefly describe the proposed methodology for gathering and evaluating evidence, drawing out original perspectives and innovative solutions
- address the connections to GAC’s mandate – foreign policy, trade, and/or international assistance
- sketch out preliminary policy recommendations
- identify actors and locations implicated in the policy idea, such as an international organization(s), forum(s), partnership(s), and country(ies)/region(s) relevant to the successful implementation of the policy idea
- not exceed 750 words
For more information, visit https://www.international.gc.ca/world-monde/study_work_travel-etude_travail_voyage/proposals-2022-propositions.aspx?lang=eng