Deadline: 1 February 2025
The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council awaits entries for its Connection Grants Program.
Connection Grants support workshops, colloquiums, conferences, forums, summer institutes, documentaries or other events or outreach activities that facilitate:
- disciplinary and/or interdisciplinary exchanges in the social sciences and humanities;
- scholarly exchanges between those working in the social sciences and humanities and those working in other research fields;
- interpectoral exchanges between academic researchers in the social sciences and humanities and researchers and practitioners from the public, private and/or not-for-profit sectors; and/or
- international research collaboration and scholarly exchanges with researchers, students and non-academic partners from other countries.
Funding Information
- Connection Grants supporting events are valued at $7,000 to $25,000 over one year.
- Connection Grants supporting outreach activities are valued at $7,000 to $50,000 over one year.
- A minimum request of $7,000 is required.
Eligible Activities
- Proposed activities can include, but are not limited to:
- adaptation (including translation, for example, into French, English or Indigenous languages) of texts or presentations for the purpose of broader knowledge mobilization to different audiences;
- development of policy briefs, knowledge syntheses and scoping reviews;
- development of articles for print or online publication in newspapers or weekly or monthly magazines whether specialized or general interest;
- virtual networking;
- media events (such as television/radio presentations);
- speaker series;
- public debates;
- documentaries;
- artistic exhibits, performances or festivals;
- development/use of interactive technologies, audiovisual products or software; and/or
- development/use of educational aids, instruments or equipment.
Ineligible Activities
- the following association activities are not eligible for funding:
- annual general meetings or any other activity directly related to an association’s business meetings;
- book launches or similar report dissemination;
- receptions for association members; and
- any activities normally paid for by the association’s operating fees.
Eligibility Criteria
- Most SSHRC funding is awarded through open competitions. Proposals can involve any disciplines, thematic areas, approaches or subject areas eligible for SSHRC funding.
- Projects whose primary objective is to conduct research activities (e.g., literature reviews, field work, data collection, interviews) or to develop stand-alone volumes, curriculum development, or preparation of teaching materials are not eligible for funding under this funding opportunity.
Evaluation Criteria
- The following criteria and scoring scheme are used to evaluate the applications:
- Challenge – The aim and importance of the endeavor (40%):
- originality, significance and expected contribution to the preservation of, access to and/or mobilization of research knowledge;
- quality of the proposed project and appropriateness of the approach;
- quality and significance of the research being mobilized;
- quality of training and mentoring to be provided to students, emerging scholars and other highly qualified personnel, and opportunities for them to contribute; and
- potential for the project results to have influence and impact within and/or beyond the social sciences and humanities research community.
- Feasibility – The plan to achieve excellence (30%):
- appropriateness of the proposed timeline and probability that the objectives will be met;
- appropriateness of the requested budget and justification of proposed costs; and
- indications of other planned resources including leveraging of cash and in-kind support from other sources.
- Capability – The expertise to succeed (30%):
- quality, quantity and significance of past experience and published and/or creative outputs of the applicant / project director and any co-applicants relative to their roles in the event or activity and the stage of their career;
- evidence of past knowledge mobilization activities (e.g., films, performances, commissioned reports, knowledge syntheses, experience in collaboration / other interactions with stakeholders, contributions to public debate and the media) and of impacts on professional practice, social services and policies, etc.; and
- quality and quantity of past contributions to the training and mentoring of students, postdoctoral researchers and other highly qualified personnel.
- Challenge – The aim and importance of the endeavor (40%):
For more information, visit Government of Canada.