Why are we funding US universities?
Harper government slashes Canadian Studies funding for U.S. universities
The federal government has supported Canadian education abroad for over 30 years, but now universities across the U.S. are being refused funding from the Department of Foreign Affairs.
Alexis Stoymenoff Apr 12th, 2012
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Canadian Studies programs at universities across the U.S. are facing serious cutbacks this year, with the rollback of an important grant program facilitated by Canada’s Department of Foreign Affairs.
"This is the first year in history that the government has denied funding dozens of grant applications from across the U.S.," said Nadine Fabbi, the associate director of Canadian Studies at the Seattle-based University of Washington.
"These grants have significantly strengthened Canada's voice in the U.S. on issues that range from the Keystone XL pipeline to water resources to Arctic sovereignty," Fabbi said.
"It is incredible to think that the Department of Foreign Affairs is willing to fund $200,000 a year for bamboo to feed panda bears, but will not support enhanced international education about and understanding of Canada," she said.
Fabbi wasn't alone in her surprise: many other universities have recently found out that important grants have fallen through.
“We’ve been receiving support from the Canadian government for at least 30 years,” said Don Alper, director of the Center for Canadian-American Studies at Western Washington University.
His institution is one of the few American schools with extensive academic programming about Canada. But this year, the Canadian government refused his Center’s grant applications.
“We heard a lot about delays and reorganizations and things like that," he said. After speaking with the people who normally work on his programs, he explained, it became "pretty clear that this was part of a larger budget revision or budget reviews going on at the federal government.”
“They didn’t tell us anything specifically about why we weren’t funded. They just said we weren’t funded.”
DFAIT’s Canadian Studies Grant Program: what does it do?
Canadian Studies grants to U.S. schools are administered through the Canadian Embassy and the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT). In addition to individual research grants for students and professors, DFAIT has traditionally offered institutional and program grants intended to “promote research, exchanges, teaching, and program activity that contribute to a better knowledge and understanding of Canada, its relationship with the United States, or its international affairs.”
"The grants have brought hundreds of American students to Canada to understand the differing values and social models of the country," Fabbi said.
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