SSHRC Partnership Development Grants - Fall 2024
Sponsor
Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC)
Program
Partnership Development Grants (PDG) [1]
Description
Partnership Development Grants are expected to respond to the objectives of the Research Partnerships [2] program.
These grants provide support over one to three years to teams/partnerships, led by a project director, to:
- develop research and/or related activities in the social sciences and humanities
- design and test new partnership approaches for research and/or related activities that can result in best practices or models
Partnership funding is intended for formal partnerships between postsecondary institutions and/or organizations of various types.
The quality of training, mentoring and employability plans for students and emerging scholars will be evaluated as an important part of the proposed initiative.
The intellectual leadership and governance for the creation of a formal partnership can come from the research community and/or from partner organizations from the public, private and not-for-profit sectors.
SSHRC invites applicants [3] and their partner organizations who wish to propose formal disciplinary, interdisciplinary, inter-institutional, international and/or cross-sector partnership arrangements to apply for support through this funding opportunity. Funds are available to support a variety of formal partnership development initiatives in all the disciplines and themes that meet SSHRC’s subject matter eligibility guidelines [4].
SSHRC’s Partnerships Tool-Kit [5] offers tools and resources to assist with the planning and implementation of your partnership.
Types of partnerships: There are two categories of partnerships that can request support:
- existing partnerships to foster new research and/or research-related partnership activities that are distinct from the partnership’s previous/ongoing partnership activities; and
- new partnerships to foster new research and/or research-related partnership activities that are undertaken by partnerships in their initial stages.
Following is a list of possible formal partnership approaches. Applicants are in no way limited to these approaches, and are welcome to combine some of the features described below.
- Disciplinary and interdisciplinary research partnerships: Inter-institutional research initiatives designed to make a significant contribution to advancing knowledge and understanding in the social sciences and/or humanities. While SSHRC welcomes proposals for interdisciplinary research partnerships involving natural sciences, engineering and/or health partner organizations, partnerships of this nature must follow SSHRC’s subject matter eligibility guidelines [4].
- Cross-sector co-creation of knowledge and understanding: Partnerships to foster innovative research, training and the co-creation of new knowledge on critical issues of intellectual, social, economic and cultural significance.
- Networks for research and/or related activities: Networks designed to advance the innovative co-creation of knowledge, as well as training and mobilization of research, on critical issues of intellectual, social, economic and cultural significance.
- Partnered knowledge mobilization: Partnerships designed to synthesize, apply and mobilize new and existing social sciences and humanities research knowledge in accessible ways to build institutional capacity and to increase the national and international impact and stature of Canadian research.
SSHRC welcomes applications involving Indigenous research [6] as well as those involving research-creation [7].
Joint Initiatives: SSHRC collaborates with organizations from across the not-for-profit, private and public sectors to support and promote training, research and connection activities in the social sciences and humanities. SSHRC’s joint initiatives are designed to reflect its strategic objectives and mandate, inform decision-makers, and, in certain cases, address specific needs of its partners.
Learn more about joint initiatives [8].
For a complete list of available joint initiatives, see SSHRC’s funding search tool [9].
Future Challenge Areas: SSHRC invites all applicants to review Imagining Canada’s Future [10]’s 16 future global challenges and to consider addressing one or more of these areas in their research proposal. This is not an evaluation criterion for merit review and does not offer additional or dedicated research funds for this funding opportunity.
Eligibility
Review eligibility criteria [11] related to subject matter, applicants, institutions, co-directors and co-applicants, collaborators and partner organizations.
Maximum Project Value
$75,000 to $200,000
Institutional and partner organization contributions: Applicants are expected to include a plan to seek and secure cash and/or in-kind contributions [12] for their initiative during the life of the grant. While there is no minimum contribution requirement, institutions and their partner organizations are expected to demonstrate that a formal partnership currently exists, or is in the process of being developed, by supporting the activities of the formal partnership through cash and/or in-kind support.
For more information, see SSHRC’s Guidelines for Cash and In-Kind Contributions [12].
Indirect Costs
There are no indirect costs on the funding provided directly by SSHRC. The external partner(s) funds are subject to the applicable indirect cost rate as specified in the Full Cost of Research Policy [13].
Project Duration
1 to 3 years
Special Notes
Quality and commitment of formal partnerships: Applicants should include relevant documentation to allow informed evaluation of the quality and level of commitment of the proposed formal partnerships [14].
Applicants must include evidence of formal partnership in their application. Evidence can include, but is not limited to:
- governance frameworks;
- agreements (intellectual property, conflict resolution, etc.);
- strategic plans; and
- other relevant documentation.
Guidelines and related support material: All applicants for SSHRC funding should consult the following guidelines while preparing their application:
- SSHRC’s Definitions of Terms [15] for terms used in the grant application process;
- the Guidelines for Effective Research Training [16], which can also be useful to reviewers and postsecondary institutions;
- SSHRC’s Indigenous Research Statement of Principles [17] and Guidelines for the Merit Review of Indigenous Research [18] for applications involving Indigenous research [6];
- SSHRC’s definition of knowledge mobilization [19] and Guidelines for Effective Knowledge Mobilization [20] for guidance on connecting with research users to create impact;
- SSHRC’s Guidelines for Support of Tools for Research and Related Activities [21], for clarification on how applicants can include up to $7,000 of funding for research and research-related tools in any SSHRC grant application; and
- SSHRC’s Resource Centre [22] for information on preparing applications.
Deadlines
If College-level review is required, your College will communicate its earlier internal deadlines.
Type | Date | Notes |
---|---|---|
Internal Deadline | Please submit your complete application along with a signed OR-5 form to the Research Services Office, resserv@uoguelph.ca [23]. Please also click "Submit" online in the SSHRC Research Portal. Please consult your College Research Manager [24]well ahead of this deadline to learn more about resources available to you. | |
External Deadline | Applications will be forwarded by the Research Services Office to SSHRC through the online SSHRC Research Portal. |
How to Apply
Applicants and partner organizations must complete the application form (available under "Apply on the Research Portal") and follow the accompanying instructions.
Applications must be submitted electronically by the Research Services Office on behalf of the applicant for the University.
See application process [25].