By Tyrone Burke
Photos by Chris Roussakis

Liz Weaver and Colleen Christopherson-Cote share notes during CFICE's launch of Community-Campus Engage Canada.The ivory tower鈥檚 walls are getting a little more permeable.

For the past six years, the SSHRC-funded action research project聽Community First: Impacts of Community Engagement聽(CFICE) has studied how players on campus and in the community can partner to co-create knowledge and positively impact communities. As the project enters its final year, it鈥檚 looking to leave a legacy.

On June 20, academics joined civil society and funding organizations from across Canada at 杏吧原创 University to聽launch Community-Campus Engage Canada, a network that will strengthen connections between participating institutions and co-create socially innovative research that鈥檚 equitable, ethical and respectful.

鈥淭his is a powerful moment,鈥 says Peter Andr茅e, associate professor of Political Science and principal investigator for CFICE.

鈥淲e have an opportunity to bring people together 鈥 an opportunity to model civil society in a new way. Today, we bring many people together, including community organizations that know the value of this work, have learned how to do it well, and in some cases have had to push back against universities and colleges. This is what we need. These voices will help set the direction forward.鈥

Academia hasn鈥檛 always had the best track record when it comes to creating research for and about marginalized communities. Too often, research done without collaboration has had little impact 鈥 or worse, actually harmed those it sought to help.

鈥淥ur goal as engaged campuses should be to lift up community,鈥 says Catherine Graham of the National Association of Friendship Centres, which represents the urban centres that are the primary providers of programs and services for urban Indigenous people.

鈥淭o that end, I鈥檓 asking that people consider who the experts are in any given research project. If academics were the experts, we wouldn鈥檛 be out there asking the questions. It鈥檚 the community that are the experts, and they conduct research every day. Life is about doing research. That鈥檚 how we navigate the world. We have questions. We experience challenges, and we have to look at the world around us, or on the Internet, to find out how we can overcome and address those challenges to improve our lives, and the lives of those who come after us.鈥

Meaningful Community Engagement

Andr茅e agrees that meaningful community engagement is critical. It鈥檚 the driving force behind the creation of Community-Campus Engage Canada.

鈥淜nowledge is not just coming from the professor,鈥 he says. 鈥淐ommunity-based research is maybe best thought of as being co-created with partners. In the fourth year of CFICE, we brought all of the evaluation data together and said collectively, where do we go from here?

CFICE created the Aligning Institutions for Community Impact working group to co-ordinate the efforts of universities, colleges, funders, and community organizations to ensure community engagement is productive. That working group is morphing into Community-Campus Engage Canada and bringing new partners to the table to create a national network that shares knowledge and advocates with provincial governments and federal agencies.

It will seek to address specific challenges community organizations face, such as under-representation in internships funded by Mitacs, a non-profit, national research organization that receives public funds to support research partnerships between universities and industry. Mitacs-funded internships require that funds be matched, and Community-Campus Engage Canada is looking at ways to better make that happen.

鈥淲e鈥檙e talking about creating an innovation fund that would pull together some money from the philanthropic sector that supports education, community development and social innovation,鈥 Andr茅e says.

鈥(We鈥檙e) saying to the sector, you support all this stuff, why don鈥檛 you put your money with a fund that can be used to create matching money for Mitacs grants for community organizations who want graduate and postdoctoral interns to further their work.鈥

Enhancing Educational Experience for Students

And while Community-Campus Engage Canada鈥檚 primary goal is to co-create research that positively impacts communities, it also promises an enhanced educational experience for students.

鈥淪tudents want to feel connected,鈥 Andr茅e says, 鈥渢o work on aspirational types of projects, to feel hope. Community-engaged experiential learning projects really give them something to get excited about. Different types of learners thrive in community projects. They give students a sense of purpose they never had before.

鈥淚t鈥檚 also important for research 鈥 outcomes are better when research is co-created with its users, when they help design questions and are part of data analysis. They鈥檙e the ones who can directly implement the results. Knowledge mobilization is a big buzzword in universities, but a lot of research doesn鈥檛 translate quickly. In partnerships, research translates very quickly.

鈥淭hen there鈥檚 a third side of this: the reputation of the post-secondary sector. There are many questions being asked about universities 鈥 are they worth the public money we invest in them? This type of work shows the benefits of research to the public, and that has a reputational benefit. The legitimacy of the post-secondary sector is enhanced when community engagement is done well.鈥