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CERIS - THE ONTARIO
METROPOLIS CENTRE: PHASE III Focus
From its very inception in 1996, the
Joint Centre of Excellence for Research on Immigration and
Settlement – Toronto (CERIS) has
been committed to meaningful, equitable and productive academic-community
collaborations and effective knowledge exchange among its various
stakeholders. This commitment is articulated both through The Ontario
Metropolis Centre’s governance structure and the very way in which research
is undertaken, shared and mobilized by Centre affiliates.
CERIS’ founding
partners created an academic research centre that would differ from other
more traditional university-based centres both in its focus on policy- and
practice-relevant research and in its partnership between the community and
university sectors. To do this, it designed a Governance Board composed of
three representatives each of the three founding universities (Ryerson
University, University of Toronto, and York University) and one
representative from each of the three founding community organizations
(Community Social Planning Council of Toronto, Ontario Council of Agencies
Serving Immigrants, and United Way of Greater Toronto). This partnership
was later expanded to include representatives from CERIS’ larger Partnership
Advisory Committee (now transformed into a Community Partnerships Council),
representatives from various governmental departments and ministries at
municipal, provincial and federal levels, and Metropolis Project funders.
As the Metropolis Project moved into Phase
II, increased emphasis was placed on domains, more pan-Canadian research,
and on research priorities articulated by federal partners. CERIS responded
to these shifts in emphasis in numerous concrete ways. These include (1)
expanding its collaborative network of academics, students, and community
and government partners, including across Metropolis centres; (2) expanding
pan-Canadian research; and (3) emphasizing research within the Centre’s
research domains that focuses on federal partners' research priorities.
Throughout Phase II, CERIS’ research became
more rooted in domain and cluster research networks, more closely integrated
with activities at other Metropolis centres, and more focused on overarching
policy/practice-relevant research themes and questions. In so doing, it
expanded its research agenda and activities to include other Ontario
municipalities, engaged with community and government partners in a number
of comparative and community-oriented research initiatives, and developed a
collaborative pan-Canadian research agenda with researchers at other
Metropolis Centers.
CERIS currently has over 186 affiliates.
Through its Phase II Request for Proposals (RFP), CERIS research affiliates
engaged in collaborative research with over 40 community groups both in the
Greater Toronto Area and other parts of Ontario. Illustrative examples of
such work includes: Gender, Violence and Health: The Role of Gender
Relations in the Ethiopian Community in Toronto; A Community Dialogue on
Homelessness Among Immigrants and Refugees in the Windsor/Essex Region.
Examples of pan-Canadian research collaborations that involve the other
Metropolis Centres include: A Geomatics Approach to Immigrant Settlement
Services: The Integration of Supply and Demand over Space and Time
(CERIS, IM, RIIM); The New Canadian Children and Youth Study (CERIS,
IM, PCERII, RIIM); and Intersecting Barriers to Health for Immigrant
Women with Precarious Status (Toronto, Montreal, Halifax). Examples of
international research collaborations include: Immigrant, Policy and
Migration Systems: An Ethnographic Comparative Approach (CERIS; The
Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy); Leavers and Stayers:
A Comparison of the Health and Development of Ethiopian Children Growing Up
in Toronto and Addis Ababa (in partnership with the University of Addis
Ababa).
In large part, the success of the Centre
can be attributed to high levels of engagement by various stakeholders. The
strong relationships and partnerships that CERIS has built with numerous
community organizations throughout its eleven year history are key to both
our research and dissemination activities. In addition to informal
connections and relationships, there are several structured ways through
which CERIS ensures that there is continuing dialogue with the community
sector. Non-governmental and diverse community groups: participate in the
identification of priority research questions for our annual Request for
Proposals (RFPs) at our annual Research Retreats; contribute as
researchers, research assistants, collaborators and advisors in all CERIS
research projects; are engaged as presenters and participants at CERIS’
Brown Bag Seminar Series, Research Forum, and Metropolis Conferences; are
co-authors on various research dissemination materials, including CERIS’
Working Papers Series and Policy Matters ; and readily facilitate
the effective ‘uptake’ of research findings.
1) Building Upon Strength
CERIS’ mandate during Phase I and Phase II
has been to undertake policy-and practice-oriented research on immigration,
settlement and integration of immigrants and refugees into the economic,
social, political and cultural fabric of the Greater Toronto Area, the
Province of Ontario, and Canada more generally. CERIS’ specific goals were:
a) to create an engaged and vibrant community of scholars and
community researchers dedicated to research on immigration,
cultural diversity and resettlement; b) to promote
innovative multidisciplinary research on the integration of immigrants into
Canada’s economic, social, political and cultural life, with particular
attention to urban settings; c) to ensure the development of a
new generation of immigration scholars and researchers through graduate
student training and mentoring; d) to disseminate research
findings to a wide audience with the intent of generating broad public
discussion and debate and to stimulate policy development.
In
Phase III, CERIS – The
Ontario Metropolis Centre
will build upon this solid foundation with a
renewed and expanded mandate:
e)
to further expand and support a highly productive networked community of
academic and community researchers, non-governmental partners, graduate
student trainees, policy-makers, practitioners and funders, interested in
migration, diversity and civic participation within the
Greater Toronto Area and across the Province of Ontario. This re-focusing
better reflects the research attention already given by CERIS affiliates to
diverse types of migrants (immigrant, refugee, non-status, temporary
workers) and migration trajectories, to multiple forms of diversity, as well
as to the various spheres of integration needs with attendant mechanisms and
outcomes;
f)
to further facilitate, support
and undertake interdisciplinary policy- and practice-relevant research at
the local, provincial, national and international levels through
active collaboration across the Metropolis Project network. Throughout
Phase I and Phase II, CERIS has funded and supported research projects
within both the Greater Toronto Area and secondary migration cities in the
province of Ontario, and also initiated and facilitated projects at both the
national and international levels. This will be expanded further during
Phase III, in closer partnership with the other Metropolis Centres.
g)
to initiate additional
knowledge exchange and transfer activities across all relevant
stakeholders in order to further optimize the ‘uptake’ of research findings
for knowledge mobilization among policy makers and practitioners.
The focus during Phase I and Phase II has centred on the undertaking of
policy/practice relevant research and subsequent attention to ‘knowledge
provision.’ In collaboration with its Metropolis partners, CERIS will move
beyond this focus on knowledge transfer to also explore new formats and fora
that facilitate greater knowledge uptake and mobilization per se.
2) Research
Prioritization – Synthesis – Transfer - Impact
CERIS’ research and knowledge transfer objectives in Phase III
are as follows:
a) Research
Prioritization
CERIS research
activities funded through the Centre’s annual Request for Proposals (RFP)
will prioritize the follow policy-research
areas:
i)
Citizenship and Social, Cultural and Civic Integration
ii)
Economic and Labour Market Integration
iii)
Family, Children and Youth
iv)
Policing, Security and Justice
v)
Welcoming Communities: The Role
of Host Communities in Attracting,
Integrating, and Retaining Newcomers and Minorities
vi) Health and Well-being
The research, dissemination and networking activities developed during
CERIS’ Phases I and II under the Education and Community, Neighbourhoods and
Housing research domains respectively will continue as important research
‘clusters’ within this revised Phase III Research Domain Structure. This
recognizes existing research CERIS affiliate strengths and interests,
facilitates cross-domain research initiatives, and will promote additional
cross-centre research collaborations with other Metropolis Centres. It is
anticipated that similar research clusters will emerge both within and
across these six priority research domains to respond to identified policy
and practice research needs; this will be both encouraged and supported.
The detailed list
of possible research questions provided in the Phase III Memorandum of
Understanding will be included in each annual CERIS RFP document, with
adjustments made on an annual basis to identify areas not yet covered
through CERIS RFP grants funded in preceding years. These lists may be
supplemented with additional research questions that identify pressing
policy- and practice- relevant research needs developed collectively at
CERIS’ annual Research Forum, and also will be further informed by the Phase
III Mid-Term Review. This research prioritization will ensure that the
identified areas of research needs will be fully addressed over the course
of Phase III.
Priority areas
identified by CERIS for Phase III will furthermore inform the development of
cross-centre research proposals at the national level for consideration by
the National Metropolis Committee.
b)
Knowledge Synthesis
A key focus
for CERIS during Phase III will be an ongoing integrative synthesis of
research findings from work undertaken within each of these six
policy-research priority areas both by a) CERIS affiliates and b) other
researchers and scholars. This emphasis will be integral to each individual
CERIS research project, from its initial developmental stages (ie. relevant
literature reviews) through to the final reporting of research findings (ie.
comparison of results with those of other studies). Such cumulative
synthesis will furthermore incorporate research findings recorded in the
Centre’s large and always expanding ‘grey literature’ collection housed in
CERIS’ Documentation Centre. CERIS Directors and Domain Leaders will work
closely with the respective Policy Priority Area Leaders to facilitate the
collective integration of cross-site research findings that are responsive
to the policy/practice research needs articulated for The Metropolis Project
– Phase III.
c) Knowledge
Transfer
The key
emphasis during CERIS Phase III will be the knowledge transfer of
research findings and syntheses for priority research areas as well as more
recently completed Phase II research. New initiatives will include the
provision of professional training in knowledge translation for Centre
Leaders and affiliates, and the involvement of the Knowledge Mobilization
Unit at York University in the preparation of one-page briefs. Other CERIS
initiatives will include the provision of professional media training to
Centre Directors, Domain Leaders, Priority Leader(s) and interested
affiliates. CERIS researchers and affiliates will work directly with each
of the six Priority Leaders to facilitate timely and effective ‘knowledge
uptake’ by policy makers, practitioners, and community partners.
d) Impact
The
anticipated outcomes for Phase III include: i).
Prioritized research initiatives in six identified priority areas that are
directly responsive to pressing policy and programmatic needs; ii). Integrative
research synthesis and continued knowledge transfer for CERIS research
completed to-date; cumulative synthesis and knowledge translation of Phase
III research; iii). Increased knowledge translation (KT) expertise
and activity; increased utilization of a wider range of KT tools and
strategies to meet the needs of diverse stakeholders; iv). Increased
knowledge transfer by CERIS affiliates and mobilization by policy makers and
practitioners through regular monitoring and measurement; v).
Informed policy development and programming in the area of migration,
diversity and civic participation; vi). A critical and sustainable
mass of research knowledge and expertise in the area of migration, diversity
and civic participation vested in a networked community of experienced
researchers and new trainees.

Source:
Rummens, J. A., Anisef, P., and Shields, J. (2007). A Renewed Research Agenda
on
Migration, Diversity and Civic Participation:
Prioritization - Synthesis - Transfer – Impact.
June 27, 2007.
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Updated
February 21, 2008 |
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