- Admission
- Programs
- Learning
- Community
- About
- Research
- Strategic Research Plan
- Implementation Plan
- Supporting Research Graduate Students
- Supporting Postdoctoral Fellows
- Valuing and Measuring Scholarly Impact
- Decolonzing Indigenous Research Ethics - Responding to the ARC Call #34
- Building World-Class Research Space and Infrastructure
- Involving Undergraduate Students in Research
- Supporting Early-Career Researchers (Faculty)
- Supporting Health and Wellness of Individuals, Populations and Communities
- Strengthening Democracy, Justice, Equity and Education
- Funding Research Chairs
- Implementation Plan
- Performance & Excellence
- Innovation
- Knowledge Mobilization
- Researcher Resources
- Institutes, Centres & Facilities
- Leadership & Departments
- Strategic Research Plan
- Dashboard
- Campuses
- Contact Us
- Emergency
Simon Fraser University’s (SFU) Strategic Research Plan (SRP) provides a list of priority areas and approaches to performing research and other scholarly work at the university from 2023-2028. It is (necessarily) a high-level document describing long-term strategic priorities. In order to support the SRP, concrete steps will need to be taken by the Office of the Vice-President, Research and Innovation (VPRI) and by the university community as a whole.
This implementation plan describes the actions planned by the VPRI in response to the SRP and to community feedback. It is a living document, with regular updates planned throughout the five-year period of the SRP. It identifies projects and initiatives that are meant to support SFU scholars, lower administrative barriers and create new opportunities for the SFU community. Many of the initiatives have been selected as a result of the extensive community consultation undertaken as part of the SRP process.
Some of the initiatives listed below are short-term with clearly measurable outcomes. Others require deeper change over longer timescales in order to complete. For longer-term initiatives, milestones have been created for the first year of the plan. There are some initiatives that, due to capacity constraints, are listed in this plan but will not start in the first year.
Priority projects and initiatives
Each initiative lists a challenge and a planned action (with timeline) to address the challenge. The descriptions in this document are brief but—as projects spin-up—more detailed documentation will be created for each. The first project is specific to the priority areas identified in the SRP. Those that follow it are cross-cutting initiatives, designed to lower barriers to success in all priority areas.
Supporting SRP priority areas
Challenge: Solving society’s great research challenges requires collaboration across departmental, institutional, sectoral and international boundaries. The strategic priority areas described in the SRP are each multi-disciplinary in nature. Researchers are sometimes faced with barriers to collaboration across departmental, faculty and institutional boundaries. Researchers also sometimes do not feel connected to the priority areas described in a Strategic Research Plan.
Action: Working with deans, chairs and directors, faculty members, postdoctoral fellows and graduate students, we will identify a program of support for internal community-building and external partnership tailored for each strategic priority area. We will also identify institutional barriers to collaboration and feelings of inclusion in these internal communities. In year one, we will implement a set of supports around one of the priority areas. In future years, external (including international) partnership strategies for each priority area will be developed.
Priority areas include:
- Advancing community-centred climate innovation
- Supporting health and wellness of individuals, populations and communities
- Expanding the foundations of knowledge and understanding our origins
- Strengthening democracy, justice, equity and education
- Transforming industry and economies through technology, management and policy
Leads for the SRP Priority Areas
Advancing community-centred climate innovation
VPRI Portfolio lead: Alison Shaw, Executive Director, SFU Climate Innovation
Supporting health and wellness of individuals, populations and communities
VPRI Portfolio lead: Valorie Crooks, Associate Vice President, Research
Strengthening democracy, justice, equity and education
VPRI Portfolio lead: Shelley Gair, Executive Director, Office of the Vice-President, Research and Innovation
Faculty Co-leads: Laurel Weldon, Dean, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Aftab Erfan, Executive Director, Centre for Dialogue
VPRI portfolio lead
Dugan O'Neil
Vice-President, Research and Innovation
Faculty lead
Mary O'Brien
Dean and Vice-Provost, Graduate Studies
VPRI portfolio lead
Valorie Crooks
Associate Vice-President, Research
VPRI portfolio lead
Elicia Maine
Associate Vice-President, Knowledge Mobilization and Innovation
Faculty lead
Carman Neustaedter
Dean, Faculty of Communication, Art and Technology
VPRI portfolio lead
Trevor Davis
Executive Director, Research Operations
VPRI portfolio lead
Trevor Davis
Executive Director, Research Operations
Faculty lead
Angela Brooks-Wilson
Dean, Faculty of Science
VPRI portfolio lead
Valorie Crooks
Associate Vice-President, Research
Faculty lead
Paul Kingsbury
Vice-Provost and Associate Vice-President, Learning and Teaching pro-tem
VPRI portfolio CO-leadS
Shelley Gair
Executive Director, Office of the Vice-President, Research and Innovation
Trevor Davis
Executive Director, Research Operations
VPRI portfolio lead
Valorie Crooks
Associate Vice-President, Research
Protecting time for research
Challenge: Faculty members have identified “lack of time” as the biggest constraint in increasing their research output. For individual faculty members, balancing the competing demands of research, teaching and service is challenging. For department chairs, school directors and deans, balancing the need to deliver academic programming—and to support a dynamic research environment—is also challenging.
Action: Consulting with deans, chairs and directors, ADRs and SFU Faculty Relations, we will identify barriers to availability and effective use of research time for faculty members. Best practices across faculties, schools and departments will be shared and places where flexibility exists in the system (e.g., course scheduling/stacking) and within the current collective agreement will be examined.