Canadian Association of University Teachers

 

Issues & Campaigns
CAUT proposes three ways to safeguard academic research
 
(March 2, 2009) The group representing academic researchers and scientists across the country is stepping up calls on the federal government to invest in research through Canada’s granting councils and ensure that scientists, not politicians, decide where research funding is spent. 

The Canadian Association of University Teachers (CAUT) wrote an open letter to Prime Minister Harper in February to warn about the impact of underfunding of basic research provided through the granting councils, and about the dangers of the government attempting to steer what research is conducted. Since then, more details have emerged about which programs are being discontinued or are in jeopardy, and many more scientists are speaking out against the government’s policies.

“One immediate danger is that lack of funding and increasing government micro-management means we could lose a lot of our top researchers,” said James Turk, CAUT’s executive director. “We’ve made some constructive proposals in a letter to Prime Minister Harper about how to fix the problem, and we hope he is seriously considering those proposals.” 

CAUT is urging the federal government to:
CAUT represents more than 65,000 academic and general staff in 121 universities and colleges across Canada.