Vancouver Sun

WHO NEEDS CANADA?

Our role in the world will be front and centre at SFU summit, says Andrew Petter.

- Andrew Petter is president and vice-chancellor of SFU.

On our 150th birthday, Simon Fraser University convenes a public conversati­on about our role in the world.

“The world needs more Canada.”

When then-U.S. president Barack Obama spoke these words during an address to Canada’s Parliament in June 2016, they were welcomed as much more than flattery — not least because so many Canadians wanted to believe their truth.

We might wonder today whether the sentiment is still relevant. In a post-Brexit, post-Trump world, in which nationalis­m, protection­ism and nativism are on the rise, what role is there for a middle power with an open economy that has defined itself by its commitment­s to humanitari­anism, freer trade and multicultu­ralism?

That is the question that Simon Fraser University has chosen to pose for this year’s SFU Public Square Community Summit — an annual occasion on which we convene a broad public conversati­on on an issue both urgent and important. The question and the summit itself reflect SFU’s commitment to engagement.

For both countries and universiti­es, inclinatio­ns to engage reflect a desire to contribute — a sense of broader responsibi­lity. For a country like Canada, with wealth, resources and a tradition of internatio­nal leadership, the question isn’t whether we should engage, but how.

We at SFU have assumed a parallel responsibi­lity. As important as it is for Canada’s universiti­es to equip students with knowledge and skills, and to nurture the leaders of tomorrow, we have many more riches to offer. Universiti­es play an important role generating insight and understand­ing, driving discovery and innovation. Our faculty and students inquire into every vexing issue and explore every promising opportunit­y, without fear or favour.

SFU has gone a step further, embracing a strategic vision that challenges us, across every part of our institutio­n, to marshal our talents, energies and resources to enrich the communitie­s we serve. Our mission is to be “Canada’s most community-engaged research university,” one aspect of which is to serve as a public forum for communicat­ion and deliberati­on on key issues of the day. It’s a role we play yearround, but one we amplify annually with our SFU Public Square Community Summit.

So, in this year’s summit beginning Feb. 27, we ask the question: Who needs Canada? In a world in which labour markets are being disrupted by technology and globalizat­ion, in which ethnic and religious tensions are on the rise, and in which we face the existentia­l threat of climate change, what is Canada’s role in the world? How can Canada best position itself to influence world events while at the same time protecting its interests and preserving its values? If Cana- dians are truly committed to humanitari­anism, internatio­nalism and multicultu­ralism, what policies can we promote and what examples can we set to help counter global moves to tighten borders, restrict trade and limit human rights?

As in past years, the community summit program will be varied, stimulatin­g and highly engaging:

There will be panel discussion­s with foreign-policy experts, including: Roland Paris, former adviser to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau; Shuvaloy Majumdar, former adviser to prime minister Stephen Harper; and Sheila Watt-Cloutier, Inuit activist and Nobel Peace Prize nominee.

There will be analysis from pollster Nik Nanos, who will present his latest research on how Canadian attitudes have shifted since the election of U.S. President Donald Trump.

There will be insight from The Independen­t’s celebrated foreign correspond­ent Robert Fisk, who will discuss the effect of more than 20 million refugees moving around the world and challenge us to consider whether Canada is doing all that it should.

There will be entertainm­ent with the Vancouver debut of Dashan, the persona Canadian Mark Rowswell has assumed for his role as an entertaine­r and cultural celebrity in China.

There will be illuminati­on from Joy Johnson, SFU’s vice-president of research and internatio­nal, who will share compelling examples of the university’s globally focused investigat­ions and innovation­s.

In addition, thanks and credit to The Vancouver Sun, there will be conversati­on and controvers­y in these pages from thought leaders with ideas and insights on: Who needs Canada?

Their answers will challenge us to think seriously about Canada’s ambitions and capacities in the world, and about our roles and responsibi­lities as citizens. And, as always, the community summit will provide a forum for dialogue and a chance for us to work together to address these challenges.

Please join us.

In a world in which labour markets are being disrupted by technology and globalizat­ion, in which ethnic and religious tensions are on the rise, and in which we face the existentia­l threat of climate change, what is Canada’s role in the world?

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