Knowledge Mobilization Strategy (SSHRC, 2009)
Knowledge Mobilization Strategy (SSHRC, 2009)
2009-11
Strategic Objectives
The following strategic objectives for knowledge mobilization were presented to SSHRCs governing council in October 2007, based in part on earlier discussions, strategic frameworks and commitments to experimentation in approaches to programming beginning as early as 2003 (see Appendixes 1 and 2). By committing to these core objectives, SSHRC will: facilitate and enable the accessibility and impact of research by increasing and enhancing the flow of research knowledge among researchers, and between researchers and knowledge users; improve research connections by facilitating reciprocal relationships between researchers and knowledge users for the (co-)creation and use of research knowledge; and enhance the quality of knowledge mobilization by developing networks, tools and best practices.
These objectives find concrete expression in SSHRCs programming and associated policy and engagement initiatives on issues such as tenure and promotion, best practices in user engagement, etc. (see Appendix 3).
2.
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3.
Integration and expansion of a community of practice both internally and externally. Examples include continuing to experiment with, and learn from, knowledge mobilization programming, and establishing a web space with knowledge mobilization resources for the social sciences and humanities community.
Considerable progress has been made on all three of these deliverables with draft guidelines in circulation among SSHRC staff, draft program design regarding knowledge mobilization in the proposed new architecture, and several conferences and workshops with scholars and grant recipients to continue to build a community of practice (e.g. CURA start-up meeting in June 2009, KIS-Clusters workshop in October 2009, several events in 2008, etc). In addition, a useful corpus of policy knowledge as been developed over the past several years (see Appendix 2).
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2008:
2009:
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The thinking behind knowledge mobilization is certainly not new and is, in many ways, related to well-established concepts such as extension and concepts advanced in the natural sciences, engineering and health sciences such as knowledge and technology transfer and knowledge translation. Publications using the expressions knowledge mobilization and mobilisation des connaissances emerged in the late 1990s, primarily in the field of education. There are scholarly debates around nuances and meaning, but the essence is related to the flow of knowledge among multiple agents leading to intellectual, social and/or economic impact. This can be amongst scholars in various disciplines, including students, and between the campus and larger community. The
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relationship between knowledge mobilization, and outcomes and impacts is far from a simple question of cause and effect and, rather, more recursive. Recently the concept of social innovation has been advanced as one that might be thought of as encompassing the types of outcomes and impacts associated with knowledge mobilization in the social sciences and humanities. A social sciences and humanities voice on knowledge mobilization opens the door to non-linear, dialogical, discursive and multi-directional approaches with the general acknowledgement that all knowledge is socially constructed unlike the unidirectional producer-consumer implications of concepts such as knowledge and technology transfer.
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Open Access and Social Media Yaffle.ca 2.0 social media tool developed at Memorial University of Newfoundland. See: http://www.sshrc-crsh.gc.ca/newsletter/2009summer-ete/yetman-eng.aspx Participation in the development of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Data Access Principles available at: http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/9/61/38500813.pdf
Conferences Participation in Knowledge Mobilization Expo (http://www.researchimpact.ca/localRI/YorkU/expo2010/index.html) and Living Knowledge Conference (http://www.scienceshops.org/).
Knowledge Mobilization and User Engagement Discussion paper and report of joint SSHRC and Canadian Council on Learning workshop on knowledge mobilization: English at http://www.cclcca.ca/CCL/Reports/Other+Reports/20090515-18Levin.htm and French http://www.cclcca.ca/CCL/Reports/Other+Reports/20090515-18Levin.htm?Language=FR. International Workshop hosted by SSHRC: http://www.sshrc.ca/site/aboutcrsh/publications/norface_workshop_e.pdf and http://www.sshrc.ca/site/aboutcrsh/publications/norface_workshop_f.pdf.
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