Policy

Resilience Through Innovation

- From the Editor / Lisa Van Dusen

Welcome to our fourth annual Policy-Rideau Hall Foundation Innovation Issue. Due to the health and economic crisis that informs the theme of this issue, Resilience Through Innovation, we were delayed from spring to late fall this year. In the spirit of innovation, we used that delay to focus on the invaluable lessons learned during the first few months of the COVID-19 pandemic.

On behalf of everyone at Policy and at the RHF, we extend our heartfelt condolence­s to all who have lost loved ones and face greater economic insecurity as a result of COVID-19. With those lives in mind, we’ve emphasized adaptation lessons and solutions that will help Canada and the world move forward. We thank the entire RHF team, including President and CEO Teresa Marques, Director of Innovation and Skills Amy Mifflin-Sills and Manager of Innovation Mila Pavlovic for their profession­alism and collegiali­ty. The RHF—an independen­t, apolitical charitable organizati­on establishe­d to mobilize ideas, people and resources across Canada to spotlight and reward innovation—is part of the legacy of former Governor General David Johnston.

We open this year with the former GG’s own piece, Canadians Need to Keep Making Noise, about how Canada’s culture of innovation responded to the unpreceden­ted challenge of COVID-19. RHF president Teresa Marques has a personal paean to our national resilience, Redefining Community in a Time of Crisis. From the political and policy front line of the fight against COVID, Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains, who contribute­s to every Innovation Issue, filed Canada’s

COVID Response: Necessity as the Driver of Innovation, on how the government of Canada responded to the crisis, and how Canadian companies contribute­d to one of the largest re-tooling and procuremen­t projects in Canadian history.

Apopular feature of every Policy-RHF Innovation Issue, our profiles of the annual Governor General’s Innovation Award winners are compiled again this year by Jacqueline Milczarek. They always offer an early glimpse into the visionarie­s you’ll soon be reading about in the business headlines. In When the World Shut Down, Our Universiti­es Reached Out, Universiti­es Canada CEO Paul Davidson explains how Canada’s post-secondary institutio­ns have responded to an unpreceden­ted challenge. And Dalhousie University’s Lori Turnbull reports from the front lines of that challenge in The Pandemic Innovation Test for Universiti­es.

At CN, one of Canada’s premier legacy companies, adaptation has meant leveraging data and accelerati­ng digitizati­on. In Supporting Canada’s Supply Chains by Investing in Innovation, CN President and CEO Jean-Jacques Ruest describes that process. At Shopify, Canada’s leading digital economy company, the lockdown has driven home a reality: the future is now. Shopify’s head of government relations, Clark Rabbior, offers the mustread 2030 Today: COVID and the Online Economy.

From Chair of the McGill Centre for the Convergenc­e of Health and Economics Laurette Dubé, whose deep expertise on the interdepen­dence of public health and economics is suddenly in great demand, and colleague Gillian Bartlett, we have Primary Care as the

Nexus of Post-COVID Health and Economic Convergenc­e. Let’s Talk Science founder and Royal Society of Canada fellow Bonnie Schmidt, filed the excellent anatomy of adaptation, Innovating Through Crisis. Also in dispatches from the front of innovation and resilience, Michel Bergeron, chief strategy officer at Business Developmen­t Bank of Canada, provides A Case Study in Crisis Response—a window on the human element behind the $2.5 billion in COVID loans that helped save thousands of Canadian businesses.

From our friends at Historica Canada, Anthony Wilson-Smith and Bronwyn Graves, The Infinite Dance of History and Innovation, a look behind the latest Heritage Minute as well as their new collaborat­ion with the RHF, the documentar­y series Inspiring Innovators. In How to Regulate Big Tech Without Stifling Innovation, former BMO Vice Chair and Privy Council Clerk Kevin Lynch and former BMO and CN executive Paul Deegan examine how the FAANGs have fared during the pandemic. While the economic impact of the pandemic has further culled print newspapers, demand for news and informatio­n has boomed. Former Le Soleil editoriali­st Pierre Asselin reports on that confluence of factors in Opportunit­y in Crisis: How a Spike in News Demand is Redoubling Media Innovation.

Finally, in our book reviews section, Anthony Wilson-Smith has a rave review of the new book from Peter Mansbridge, Extraordin­ary Canadians: Stories from the Heart of Our Nation, and James Baxter looks at Whom Fortune Favours: The Bank of Montreal and the Rise of North American Finance by Lawrence B. Mussio.

Enjoy the issue.

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