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The Institute of Island
Studies assists in coordinating collaborative research among local, regional,
national, and international partners.
UPEI has demonstrated its leadership in island studies
collaborative research by appointing the world's first research
chair in island studies, Dr. Godfrey Baldacchino. Dr. Baldacchino
took up the chair at UPEI in 2003. For more information on Dr. Baldacchino,
visit his homepage.
Below, you will find an excerpt from
the UPEI Strategic Research Plan, demonstrating Island Studies' role in the University's
research activity. This document was drafted in 1999. New developments, of course,
are expanding our capacity. 1. Background and performance at UPEI:
Island Studies is both an existing and an emerging area of strength at UPEI. In
the most general sense, Island Studies could be defined to include all research
focussed on Prince Edward Island. Increasingly, however, the term has come to
be understood in the comparative context; that is, the study of Prince Edward
Island in relation to other small islands world-wide. This expanded conceptual
framework owes much to work undertaken by UPEI's Institute of Island Studies and
supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council. In all, the
Institute has received four Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council grants
(a total of $100,000), culminating in 1996 in the first-ever grant for an International
Summer Institute to be awarded to an Atlantic Canadian university. Building on
this core research funding, the Institute has been able to raise more than a million
dollars from numerous other sources in support of its international small-island
initiatives. The result has been dozens of scholarly articles (in peer reviewed
publications, as book chapters, or as invited contributions to international public
policy journals); three books, one of them published by Macmillan, UK; and the
creation of a powerful international network linking us with island-based academic
activity in all parts of the world. 2. Foci, themes, and collaborations:
To date, the leadership at UPEI in comparative Island Studies has come from the
Department of Political Studies. As a result, a good deal of ground-breaking work
has been done on the political economy of North Atlantic islands, with an emphasis
on the creative use of jurisdictional capacity. In cooperation with the Department
of English and the L.M. Montgomery Institute, the Institute of Island Studies
hosted (in 1998) the first in a series of international scholarly conferences
on the Literature of Small Islands. UPEI has also been a leader in pioneering
the use of electronic communications for island-based research. An area of emerging
importance is that of island ecosystems, with an emphasis on environmental issues
and sustainability. In cooperation with the United States National Research Council,
the Institute has also been active in assessing knowledge economy capacity for
Prince Edward Island. In short, research in Island Studies has the potential to
include all major areas of academic enquiry as they pertain to islands, from issues
of island governance and culture, through to environmental sustainability and
emerging areas such as health research and innovation and technology.
3. Impact and Relevance to Prince Edward Island and Canada:
The promise of Island Studies is that it has the power to combine
two mutually reinforcing foci: we can maintain and strengthen our
research emphasis on Prince Edward Island while making a vital contribution
to the emerging international field of small island studies. In
fact, we have the opportunity to help define the discipline. One
major impact for Prince Edward Island, and the region, will be public
policy insights resulting from a substantial body of first-rate
interdisciplinary research. The long-term objective will be to establish
the University of Prince Edward as Canada's centre of excellence
for the study of islands. To achieve this, we will need to move
aggressively to build on the present infrastructure -- including
the Institute of Island Studies, the existing Academic Minor in
Island Studies and the Masters of Arts in Island Studies Programme
-- by building upon existing research capacity and deepening the
links with the various Departments, Schools, and Faculties at UPEI.
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