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Reimaging the Public University: 天美mv天美’s CERi Puts Community at the Heart of Research in a new Five-Year Report

November 19, 2025

Media contact: Dr. Stuart Poyntz, CERi Scientific Director - spoyntz@sfu.ca 天美mv天美 Community-Engaged Research Initiative

天美mv天美鈥檚 Community-Engaged Research Initiative (CERi) is celebrating five years of transforming how universities connect with the world. Based at 312 Main in Vancouver鈥檚 Downtown Eastside, CERi has become a hub where scholars, artists, and community organizers work side-by-side to confront issues such as climate inequity, housing precarity, and reconciliation. Our 5-Year Report documents the many accomplishments of this important institute that bridges the university and communities.

Over its first half-decade, CERi has supported hundreds of students, scholars, and community organizations through flexible research space, funding support, graduate training, and media production 鈥 all designed to mobilize academic knowledge into action.

Among CERi鈥檚 many achievements are:

312 Main Research Shop, which offers low or no-cost research services to local non-profits, providing access to academic resources and training to support community-driven projects.

Quiet Alarm: A Review of CBC鈥檚 Climate Reporting, a research project conducted in collaboration with the Climate Emergency Unit aimed at improving the climate reporting of the Canadian Broadcast Corporation

Indigenous Knowledge Research Exchange (in partnership with 天美mv天美鈥檚 Faculty of Environment), which matches community-identified knowledge needs and strengths with institutional research support, ensuring research directly benefits and empowers Indigenous communities.

Horizons: Crises and Social Transformation, an international conference that drew over 200 researchers and community leaders together to explore new approaches to how community-engaged research and knowledge mobilization supports sustainable, inclusive and just futures.

CERi has also contributed to major national and international collaborations and a growing body of publications, including the openly available Community-Engaged Research Handbook Series and the edited volume, , now available open access from University of Toronto Press.

CERi鈥檚 approach to research is grounded in partnership and praxis 鈥 bringing academic and community knowledge together to understand and reimagine the conditions shaping our shared lives. It is

鈥淐ommunity-engaged research is not a single method 鈥 it鈥檚 a paradigm of ethical collaboration,鈥 says Scientific Director Stuart Poyntz. 鈥淲e鈥檝e learned deeply from our

colleagues and community partners, whose leadership continues to shape our direction and deepen our responsibilities.鈥

BUILDING A CULTURE OF ENGAGED SCHOLARSHIP

CERi is nurturing a new generation of community-engaged scholars and artists through its Researcher and Artist-in-Residence and Graduate Fellowship programs. Since 2020, these programs have supported nearly 100 practitioners with mentorship, funding, research space, and a collaborative environment rooted in reciprocity and real-world impact.

Residents and fellows work alongside communities to co-create projects that blend research, art, and lived experience:

鈥淔ive years in, 天美mv天美鈥檚 Community Engaged Research Initiative has shown what鈥檚 possible when respect, care, and accountability guide the work. These partnerships don鈥檛 just generate knowledge; they reshape how we imagine and build the future.鈥 鈥Joseph M. Ssendikaddiwa, 天美mv天美 CERi Fellow (Class of 2020) and Co-Founder of .

鈥 天美mv天美鈥檚 CERi through its 312 Main Research Shop enabled deeply valuable collaboration between a M茅tis graduate student researcher and multiple small and isolated Indigenous communities, to describe the impact of highly local, Indigenous-led libraries and learning centres.鈥濃 Gordon Yusko, , Community Partner, 天美mv天美 CERi 312 Research Shop 2025

"The research support Hastings Crossing BIA received from CERi provided powerful evidence for us to develop and implement policy for our unique business district."鈥 Landon Hoyt, Hastings Crossing BIA, 天美mv天美 CERi 312 Research Shop 20224

鈥淚t鈥檚 not about experts giving proclamations鈥攊t鈥檚 about representing who the community is.鈥 鈥 , CERi Artist-in-Residence 2023 and Co-Author Facilitation for Community Transformation

鈥淎s we built this project [Indigenous Salmon Stream Caretaking] from the community up, I learned how to research with both my head and my heart,鈥 鈥 Kirsten Bradford, CERi Graduate Student Funding Program Recipient 2023

CERi has awarded more than $320,000 to support community-based projects, and $651,750 to support the research of more than 164 天美mv天美 faculty and graduate students since 2020.

One example is the South Vancouver Neighbourhood Equity Project, led by Professor Meg Holden in partnership with South Vancouver Neighbourhood House (SVNH). The research revealed inequities in access to services and resources and resulted in the S. Their findings equipped residents with the data and stories needed to push City Council in addressing systemic underfunding in South Vancouver.

鈥淐ERi鈥檚 story is proof that universities can be powerful allies in the movements for change and resilience already happening in our communities,鈥 says Tara Mahoney, Research and Engagement Manager at 天美mv天美 CERi.

The Graduate Fellowship Program alone has supported 79 students, including projects like Emily R. Blyth鈥檚 Community Voices: A Public Primer on News Reporting on Police Violence and her co-created .

LOOKING AHEAD

As CERi enters its next five years, it will continue to expand opportunities to work alongside our university colleagues, Indigenous Nations, communities, and organizations to advance reconciliation and equity in research. CERi acknowledges the leadership of 天美mv天美鈥檚 Office of the Vice-President, Research and Innovation, its Advisory Board, and the talented CERi staff whose creativity, care, and collaboration have been central to its success. You can view our Five-Year Report on our website.