Descriptions sorted by Research Support
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Research security requirements for Horizon Europe include:- A focus on the protection of classified information and/or the potential need to classify research results.
- Security assessments that review the potential for activities, methods, technologies or knowledge to be misused for malevolent purposes and any other security concerns, including national security restrictions, not captured in other categories.
During the proposal preparation stage, researcher applicants are required to complete a security self-assessment, which is included as part of the grant application. Depending on the nature of the specific funding opportunity or any concerns identified during the review of the self-assessments, an additional security review may be required. Security checks can also be conducted during or after the life of a project.
View additional resources.
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The CU Commitment Form provides documentation, in a single location, of all Carleton contributions to a research project, including detailing any relevant conditions or restrictions on the contributions. This provides clarity to you, as the researcher, on the full details on how to access and maximize the benefits from these contributions when you are awarded the funds.
A duly completed CU Commitment Form also ensures that OVPRII can more efficiently pay out contributions from OVPRI to you (the principal investigator [PI]), without follow-up by yourself to each contributor, upon fund opening.
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Your cash or in-kind contributions to research projects need to be documented for several reasons:
- Facilitate award management and reporting of Carleton’s cash and/or in-kind contributions to research projects by Research Financial Services.
- Create a written record that you have approved the contribution.
- Provide documentation to mitigate the risks of over-committing your time, existing research funding, and/or other resources that may jeopardize the ability to fulfill obligations under the proposed project.
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PIs need to sign a Commitment Form when they are committing cash from existing research funding or research time (if eligible) in an application, institutional letter, or agreement.
Any fund holder is required to sign the Commitment Form to ensure sufficient documentation of their cash contributions to the project. Similarly, Commitment Forms are used to ensure that in-kind contributions are approved by those with the authority to make those contributions. This applies to the PI, where you are committing their own research funds and research time (if eligible) to a project.
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When required, the form should be prepared by an OVPRII staff member, the Dean’s office, or the PI with the support of a research facilitator (as applicable) and circulated to all relevant signatories, in advance of the submission of an application to the funder, or the institutional signature on a letter of support or a research agreement.
As a PI, you may be asked to sign a Commitment Form in cases where you are making contributions from your own research funding or research time (if eligible) to a project.
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A Commitment Form is required when:
- there are committed cash and/or in-kind contributions committed as part of a funding application, institutional letter of support, or research agreement; or
- there is an agreement at the time of application that part of the research funding will flow to Carleton or its administrative units for specific costs (for example, PI fees, salary recovery, course buyout, etc.).
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The Carleton University (CU) Commitment Form is a document used by the Faculty Research Offices and various offices within the OVPRI. It is designed to capture:
- Internal cash and/or in-kind contributions to a research funding application/research contract/agreement included in sections of applications in abridged form (i.e. letter of support), such as source, amount and required signing authority approvals; and/or
- Direct and indirect research support cost reimbursements expected to be received if the project is successful by administrative units at Carleton University that are incurred as part of the ongoing support to a research project, such as the budgetary amounts for course buyouts, PI fees, salary recovery, and/or
- Research revenues expected to be generated by the project if successful.
The form complements the cuResearch Approval Form by providing more detailed documentation of institutional contributions and allows for the documentation and approval of cash and/or in-kind contributions from a wider range of potential contributors.
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To log in, select cuResearch and enter your MyCarletonOne* (MC1) account details if you already have an account or create an account.
*While the system uses your MC1 credentials to log in, you still need a cuResearch profile created to access the site.
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There is an internal and external submission process. Carleton researchers are encouraged to familiarize themselves with both. -
Horizon Europe proposals consist of two parts:- Part A: Administrative forms that include general information on participants, budget, ethics, security and gender equality.
- Part B: Technical and research descriptions of the project. This includes objectives, methodology, impact assessment, dissemination plans and budget justification.
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All Horizon Europe projects require collaboration between a minimum of three organizations from different countries:- Carleton (Canada) counts as the first.
- The other two must be from the EU or an associated country.
- At least one organization must be from an EU Member State.
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Visit the EU Funding & Tenders Portal to search for calls. Use the following filters:- Programming period: 2021-2027
- Programme: Horizon Europe
- Programme part: Global Challenges and European Industrial Competitiveness
You can also view the cluster-specific calls directly from our website.
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