Panel Calls for Dedicated Funding and Coordination to Address Inequities
Canadian universities and colleges stand at a pivotal moment as an external advisory panel urges the federal government in Ottawa to significantly ramp up support for research conducted and disseminated in French. The report, released in May 2026 by the External Advisory Panel on the Creation and Dissemination of Scientific Information in French, highlights systemic barriers that disadvantage francophone researchers and institutions across the country, from Quebec to minority language communities in provinces such as New Brunswick, Ontario, Manitoba, and Alberta.
The panel, co-chaired by Linda Cardinal of the University of Ottawa and Vincent Larivière of Université de Montréal, spent 18 months consulting more than 160 stakeholders and reviewing data on funding patterns, publication trends, and training opportunities. Its findings underscore that while the modernized Official Languages Act of 2023 commits Canada to substantive equality for French, practical implementation in the research ecosystem lags behind.
Current Landscape of French-Language Research in Canadian Higher Education
Research in French encompasses work conducted at least partly in that language by francophone scholars, including studies on francophone communities and issues relevant to official language minority communities. Institutions such as Université Laval, Université de Moncton, Université de Saint-Boniface, and Campus Saint-Jean at the University of Alberta play central roles, alongside bilingual universities like the University of Ottawa. These settings produce vital contributions in fields ranging from health sciences and social sciences to engineering and environmental studies, yet they often receive disproportionate shares of federal research dollars compared to larger anglophone counterparts.
Funding agencies including the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC), and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) operate under mandates that have historically concentrated resources in major research-intensive universities. This dynamic creates challenges for smaller francophone or bilingual institutions seeking to build capacity in emerging areas such as artificial intelligence or climate science.
Key Challenges Identified by the Advisory Panel
The report outlines three primary barriers: normative challenges involving perceived or actual linguistic bias in peer review and evaluation processes; financial inequities that limit resources for French-language infrastructure, databases, and software; and organizational gaps in coordination across federal departments and granting councils. Francophone researchers frequently face pressure to publish primarily in English to maximize impact and career advancement, contributing to a documented decline in French-language scholarly output.
Additional hurdles include limited availability of French-language teaching materials, specialized databases, and tools for data analysis. The privatization of certain Canadian scientific journals has further reduced French abstracts and content, accelerating anglicization. For colleges and CEGEPs engaged in applied research, support remains particularly thin despite their role in training technicians and applied scientists who serve francophone communities.
Strategic Benefits for Canada’s Research Ecosystem
Strengthening French-language scientific research offers advantages beyond linguistic equity. It enhances Canada’s scientific diversity, fostering multiple perspectives that improve innovation and problem-solving. Economically, it builds human capital in both official languages and supports knowledge mobilization that reaches francophone populations more effectively. Diplomatically, robust French-language research positions Canada as a leader within the International Organisation of La Francophonie, advancing science diplomacy and international collaborations.
Stakeholders such as the Association canadienne-française pour l’avancement des sciences (ACFAS) emphasize that these efforts also help retain and attract talent, countering brain drain and supporting the next generation of researchers through improved training pipelines at institutions like Université de Moncton and the University of Ottawa.
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Recommendations for Governance, Investment, and Leadership
The panel proposes three interconnected pillars. First, establish a Secretariat for the Coordination of Research in French to improve oversight and integration across granting agencies and departments. Second, create a dedicated Research in French Support and Promotion Fund providing at least $40 million annually to address funding gaps and support infrastructure, training, and dissemination. Third, strengthen federal leadership by embedding language considerations into all research policies and evaluations, ensuring positive measures under the Official Languages Act.
These measures would complement existing initiatives, such as recent federal investments including $1 million announced in April 2026 for French-language scientific information and $900,000 allocated in 2025 to ACFAS for its Service d’aide à la recherche en français.
Impacts on Faculty, Students, and Institutions
For faculty at francophone universities, enhanced support could translate into better access to grants, reduced pressure to anglicize outputs, and improved resources for mentoring graduate students. PhD candidates and postdoctoral researchers would benefit from expanded scholarships and mobility programs, helping build critical mass in French-language scholarship. Colleges would gain opportunities to expand applied research partnerships serving regional francophone economies.
University administrators note that coordinated federal action could also facilitate inter-institutional collaborations, such as those supported by the France-Canada Research Fund, which already promotes joint projects between Canadian and French teams across disciplines.
Perspectives from Higher Education Stakeholders
ACFAS executive director Sophie Montreuil welcomed the report’s broad framing of research in French as both an academic and strategic priority. Martin Normand of the Association des collèges et universités de la francophonie canadienne stressed the need for swift action ahead of consultations on the next Action Plan for Official Languages. Panel member Vincent Larivière highlighted the report’s reception among francophone scholars while calling for greater engagement from anglophone institutions and federal bodies.
Experts from the Canadian Institute for Research on Linguistic Minorities point out that communities outside Quebec rely heavily on federal support, given varying provincial commitments. They caution against repeating past responses that catalogued existing programs without new commitments.
Broader Context Within Canadian Official Languages Policy
The push aligns with the 2023 modernization of the Official Languages Act, which recognizes French’s minority status in Canada and North America and emphasizes substantive equality. Federal responsibilities extend to research funding, where positive measures can counteract historical imbalances. This builds on earlier parliamentary reviews, including a 2023 House of Commons committee report on revitalizing French-language scientific publication.
Links to international efforts, including partnerships facilitated by the French Embassy in Canada and programs like the France-Canada Research Fund, further illustrate opportunities for leveraging global francophone networks.
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Future Outlook and Potential Pathways Forward
With consultations on the 2028–2033 Action Plan for Official Languages scheduled to begin soon, higher education leaders see a window for integrating the panel’s recommendations. Successful implementation could set a model for multilingual research ecosystems worldwide, enhancing Canada’s competitiveness while honoring its bilingual identity.
Continued dialogue among universities, granting councils, and Canadian Heritage will be essential. Institutions are already exploring internal strategies, such as dedicated French-language research offices and incentives for bilingual publication, but sustained federal investment remains the linchpin.
Actionable Steps for Universities and Researchers
University leaders can advocate for the proposed secretariat and fund during upcoming policy consultations. Researchers might prioritize projects that incorporate French-language components or address francophone community needs. Professional associations like ACFAS and the Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences can play bridging roles in developing evaluation criteria sensitive to linguistic context.
Graduate programs could expand French-language training modules and international mobility opportunities, preparing students for careers that span Canada’s linguistic landscapes and global francophone markets.
