Science Policy in Canada

Scientific research and innovation are the foundation that underpins wealth creation in the 21st century. Canadians’ health, economic prosperity, global competitiveness, and high standard of living are intimately linked to the continued strength and productivity of the nation’s scientific research engine. In turn, the success of this research engine depends on the formulation of sound policies governing science and innovation – a process that requires the exchange of ideas among all stakeholders, including university researchers, industry, and government.

In a post-modern society, the complexity and interconnectedness of science and society makes it critical for researchers, policy-makers, industry, and the general public to be working in tandem to integrate their goals and efforts seamlessly and effectively.

In Canada, the importance of science policy has not been adequately acknowledged – consequently, the field suffers from shortcomings in infrastructure that need imminently to be addressed. To this end, Canada should establish a national research centre dedicated to science policy, and foster a national forum and media in which stakeholders and experts can discuss for a general audience the direction of Canadian science. The Canadian Science Policy Conference is a step in this direction, and I hope this page will serve as a national medium for this important conversation.

These steps are crucial to the advancement of the Canadian scientific enterprise, and therefore to all Canadians and to the socio-economic health of our country in the decades to come.

I would like to thank all the contributors to this forum and invite others to engage in this dynamic and exciting dialogue.

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Top Priority

Top Priority

Description image by Kei Koizumi Assistant Director, Federal Research and Development, the White House OSTP.
  • First Posted: Oct 16 2009 10:08 AM
  • Updated: 8 months ago

Science and technology has the power to address the environment, the economy, and the security and health of the American people.

In 2009, the United States transitioned between the Bush Administration and the Obama Administration. The White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) is responsible for leading the formulation and implementation of science and technology policy (S&T) within the U.S. government and carrying out administration priorities through the application of science and technology policy.

The Obama Administration is committed to harnessing S&T to make progress on four key national challenges of economic recovery and renewed growth; dealing with the interrelated challenges of energy, the environment, and climate; a healthier American people; and a secure America within a global world. To accomplish these goals, OSTP is harnessing resources for federal research and development (R&D) investments, but also attempting to implement new science policy practices.

OSTP and the National Economic Council (NEC) recently released A Strategy for American Innovation that provides a framework for understanding past, current, and future Obama Administration policies in science, technology, entrepreneurship, education, workforce, and infrastructure. Part of the broad strategy is a policy framework to invest in the building blocks of American innovation. A key policy priority within the strategy is to restore American leadership in fundamental research. To do this, in February the Administration incorporated the largest increase in U.S. federal basic research in history (more than $18 billion (U.S.)) as part of the Recovery Act (commonly known as the U.S. economic stimulus bill).

In April, President Obama announced the President’s Plan for Science and Innovation to double the budgets of three key U.S. science agencies over a decade. In May, the U.S. Federal 2010 Budget proposed to make the Research & Experimentation Tax Credit to provide incentives for private-sector R&D investments, and also established a plan to triple the number of National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowships in four years to encourage tomorrow’s leading scientists. And in April, President Obama proposed a goal that the U.S. should invest 3 per cent of its GDP in R&D as a nation, a goal he has reiterated on several occasions since then.

Within existing U.S. investments, OSTP and others have been working to increase the impacts of investments by providing more support for high-risk, high-return research, for multidisciplinary research, and for early-career scientists. All of these policy initiatives are organized to make progress toward the four key national challenges, and to measure the effectiveness of these policies OSTP is also supporting “science of science policy” evaluation tools and research to link research funding to outcomes.

Inspired by grand national challenges for the 21st century, and acting within a broad strategy for innovation, science and technology policy plays an important role in the policy agenda of the Obama Administration. In addition to basic research policies outlined above, there are other policies in technology development, commercialization, public sector innovation, entrepreneurship, immigration, and education, all of which introduce new policy practices to the U.S. Federal government.

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