(Ottawa - October 27, 2016) - The Council of Canadian Academies (CCA) is pleased to announce that it is undertaking an expert panel workshop on
science policy ideas under development in Alberta. The workshop will engage national and international experts to explore various dimensions of sub-national science systems and the role of sub-national science policy.
"We are pleased to undertake this project," said Eric M. Meslin, PhD, FCAHS, President and CEO of the CCA. "It is an assessment that could discuss strategies that have applications in Alberta, across Canada, and elsewhere."
A two-day workshop, to be undertaken in November 2016, will bring together a multidisciplinary and multi-sectoral group of leading Canadian and international experts to review, validate, and advance work being done on science policy in Alberta. The workshop will explore the necessary considerations when creating science policy at the sub-national level. Specifically it will:
- Debate and validate the main outcomes of a sub-national science enterprise, particularly in relation to knowledge, human, and social capital.
- Identify the key elements and characteristics of a successful science enterprise (e.g., funding, trust, capacity, science culture, supporting interconnections and relationships) with a particular focus at a sub-national level.
- Explore potential intents of a sub-national science policy, important features of such a policy, and the role of the policy in informing investment decisions.
To lead the design of the workshop, complete the necessary background research, and develop the workshop summary report, the CCA has appointed a five member
Workshop Steering Committee, chaired by
Joy Johnson, FCAHS, Vice President, Research, Simon Fraser University. The other Steering Committee members are:
Paul Dufour, Adjunct Professor, Institute for Science, Society and Policy; University of Ottawa, Principal, Paulicy Works;
Janet Halliwell, Principal, J.E. Halliwell Associates, Inc.;
Kaye Husbands Fealing, Chair and Professor, School of Public Policy, Georgia Tech; and
Marc LePage, President and CEO, Genome Canada.
The CCA, under the guidance of its Scientific Advisory Committee, and in collaboration with the Workshop Steering Committee, is now assembling a multidisciplinary, multi-sectoral, group of experts to participate in the two-day workshop. The CCA's Member Academies - the Royal Society of Canada, the Canadian Academy of Engineering, and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences - are a key source of membership for expert panels. Many experts are also Fellows of the Academies.
The workshop results will be published in a final summary report in spring 2017. This workshop assessment is supported by a grant from the Government of Alberta.
About the Council of Canadian AcademiesThe Council of Canadian Academies (CCA) is an independent, not-for-profit organization that began operation in 2005. The CCA undertakes independent, authoritative, evidence-based expert assessments that inform public policy development in Canada. Assessments are conducted by independent, multidisciplinary panels of experts from across Canada and abroad. Panel members serve free of charge and many are Fellows of the CCA's Member Academies: the Royal Society of Canada, the Canadian Academy of Engineering, and the Canadian Academy of Health Sciences. For more information about the CCA or its assessments, please visit
www.scienceadvice.ca.
For more information please contact:Samantha Rae Ayoub
Communications and Publishing Director
Council of Canadian Academies
613.567.5000 x 256samantha.rae@scienceadvice.ca