In broad terms, we have sought to ensure that our Café themes cover different aspects of sustainability that are regionally relevant. In Vancouver, our focus is on community housing sustainability in the context of climate change.
Each Café will begin in the online community, a month before the in-person event, with thought leaders contributing short posts to our blog. Providing participants with important research and information in advance of the live event and stimulating advance discussion, these blog posts will highlight the existing research being mobilized during the Cafés.
On the day, events will begin with short talks from leaders in the field, reviewing key knowledge and context in an accessible manner. The Café will begin with a moderated, forty-five (45) minute discussion among thought leaders, in a “fireside chat” format. Acting as a discussant/talk-show host, the moderator will pose questions to the thought leaders before opening the floor to questions from the audience. After this brief introduction, facilitators will lead small group discussions and activities surrounding the Café topic at hand.
Through facilitated work in small groups, each Café will culminate in the production of a concrete deliverable: a roadmap for pracademic collaboration on the topic of the Café, including the assembling of research teams to address particular components of the broader programme.
Following closing remarks from the thought leaders, each Café will conclude with individual reflection and small group planning, challenging participants to outline how they could bring the roadmap to life in their own communities. Led by the Co-Chairs, research assistants will produce summary reports of each Café, highlighting the research employed and the knowledge co-created. These reports will be compiled for dissemination to participants within one week of the workshop.
The overall outcome of Café Pracademique workshops like these is to unite public policy practitioners, academics, industry professionals, and citizens to mobilize knowledge and drive positive, lasting, ongoing policy research innovation. Participants will build new personal and professional networks in order to sustain a continuous cross-pollination of ideas across the policy community. In the process, this initiative will help bridge the gap between academia and policy makers by uniting thought leaders from both communities to build on the knowledge and expertise of all involved. Ultimately, public sector strategies will be informed by research, while academic research would be informed by practice-based results.
The workshop has four principal objectives:
Vancouver is located on the unceded territory of the Coast Salish Peoples, including the territories of the xʷməθkwəy̓əm (Musqueam), Skwxwú7mesh (Squamish), and Səl̓ílwətaʔ/Selilwitulh (Tsleil-Waututh) Nations.