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Submit your Research - Make it Global NewsLaunch of the NRF-SSHRC Seed Grants Initiative
The National Research Foundation (NRF) of South Africa and Canada's Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) have officially launched the South Africa-Canada Seed Grants for Collaborative Research. This timely funding call, announced in early April 2026, marks a significant step in fortifying ties between South African and Canadian universities. It builds on the Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) signed on 20 November 2025 during the South Africa-Canada Universities Network (SACUN) workshop at Carleton University in Ottawa. The initiative aims to fund up to eight joint projects, providing seed capital to nurture early-stage partnerships that tackle pressing global issues.
For South African higher education institutions, this represents a vital opportunity to expand research horizons. With projects set to commence in late 2026, the grants emphasize capacity building, knowledge exchange, and innovative solutions developed through bilateral efforts. South African principal investigators (PIs) can access up to ZAR 300,000 per year for up to three years, while their Canadian counterparts receive up to CAD 100,000 over two years, with a possible one-year no-cost extension.
Background: From SACUN Network to Joint Funding
SACUN, anchored by Carleton University, emerged in 2023 as a platform for South African and Canadian universities to collaborate on research, education, and innovation. Key South African members include institutions like the University of the Free State (UFS), University of South Africa (Unisa), and others, fostering discussions on shared challenges. The 2025 workshop not only solidified the MoU but also paved the way for this concrete funding mechanism.
Prior to this, South Africa-Canada research ties have grown steadily, with collaborations contributing to post-apartheid innovation policies. Foreign funding now accounts for 17% of South Africa's R&D expenditure, totaling ZAR 7 billion in 2022, underscoring the strategic value of such partnerships. International collaborations boost citation rates by up to 50% and enhance research quality through diverse perspectives and resources.
Funding Structure and Eligibility Criteria
The seed grants support projects lasting 24 to 36 months, focusing on exploratory work that can lead to larger initiatives. South African PIs must be affiliated with public universities or universities of technology, hold a PhD, and submit joint proposals via the NRF Connect portal. Canadian PIs, targeting social sciences and humanities aspects, apply through SSHRC-eligible postsecondary institutions.
Budgets cover personnel, travel for exchanges, workshops, student training, and equipment. Universities are encouraged to supplement with internal or other funds. Non-academic partners like NGOs can participate but not lead. This structure ensures equitable contributions, with joint peer review by NRF-SSHRC panels evaluating scientific merit, impact, and feasibility.
- NRF funding: Max ZAR 900,000 over 3 years (ZAR 300k/year)
- SSHRC funding: Max CAD 100,000 over 2 years (+extension)
- Max 8 projects funded
Priority Themes Aligned with Global and Local Needs
The call targets five key themes, each resonating deeply with South Africa's development priorities:
- Just and Resilient Societies: Addresses reconciliation, gender equality, poverty alleviation, good governance, quality education, and Indigenous knowledge systems—critical for South Africa's social cohesion post-apartheid.
- Environmental Sustainability: Focuses on sustainable agriculture, food security, clean energy transitions, and water management, vital amid climate vulnerabilities in the region.
- Artificial Intelligence: Explores smart cities, digital economies, big data, and ethical policymaking, positioning SA universities at the forefront of Africa's AI revolution.
- Sustainable Growth: Tackles critical minerals supply chains, African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) integration, blue economy, and skills development for green jobs.
- Mathematics Education: Enhances teaching methodologies and access, addressing SA's STEM skills gap.
These themes encourage interdisciplinary approaches, blending SSHRC's humanities expertise with NRF's broad science mandate. For instance, AI ethics in urban planning could merge Canadian tech insights with SA's township realities. The full framework details these priorities.
Application Process and Key Deadlines
Joint proposals require a single submission by the South African PI on NRF Connect by 28 May 2026, with designated authority endorsement by 4 June 2026. Documents include CVs, 10-page project descriptions, budgets, and letters of support. Canadian partners coordinate via SSHRC.
UFS, for example, sets an internal deadline of 22 May 2026, advising early preparation. Funding decisions expected September 2026. This streamlined process minimizes administrative hurdles, enabling focus on research innovation.

Boosting Capacity in South African Higher Education
International partnerships like this are transformative for SA universities. Studies show collaborative research yields higher-impact outputs, with SA's international papers cited 1.5 times more. Foreign grants enhance infrastructure, train postgrads, and attract talent—crucial as SA's R&D intensity lags at 0.5% of GDP.
NRF Deputy CEO Dr Gugu Moche noted: “This call fosters research capacity and inclusive partnerships to address global challenges.” For historically disadvantaged institutions (HDIs), it aligns with NRF's SARCHi chairs expansion, promoting equity.
Opportunities for Students and Early-Career Researchers
Grants prioritize training: exchanges, workshops, and co-supervision for masters, PhDs, and postdocs. This addresses SA's postgraduate completion rates (under 20% for PhDs) by exposing students to Canadian methodologies and networks. Past intl collabs have doubled publication rates for participants.
- Joint student mobility
- Mentorship programs
- Co-authored papers
Such exposure equips SA graduates for global careers, vital amid 30% youth unemployment.
Photo by Caio Fernandes on Unsplash
Real-World Impacts and Future Outlook
While new, the grants build on SACUN's momentum. Potential in sustainable growth via AfCFTA could spur economic modeling; AI for smart cities addresses Johannesburg's urbanization. Long-term, expect scaled projects, policy influence, and commercialization.
Challenges like visa logistics or equity in partnerships are mitigated by joint oversight. As Michael Nxumalo of NRF states: “SACUN lays the foundation for impactful research on shared challenges.” This initiative positions SA universities as global players, driving innovation for a resilient future.

South African academics should seize this window—register on NRF Connect today and partner with Canadian peers for transformative research.

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