Strategic Plan 2025‑2030
In 2020, it seemed as if the world turned upside down and it has been tumultuous ever since. Pandemic, inflation, war, climate change and highly charged political discourses have made ‘business as usual’ nearly impossible. While FASS skills, training, competencies, expertise, experience have long beenin demand, they are more important now than ever.
As Loleen Berdahl and coauthors write in their 2024 book,For the Public Good,Canada (like most countries) is beset by numerous “wicked problems”—none of which areonlyscientific or technological. Notably, “[m]any of the skills required to solve wicked problems lie in the ‘home domain’” of FASS: “critical thinking, design thinking, systems thinking, creativity, an ability to navigate ambiguity and to integrate different ways of knowing and disciplinary approaches, and a capacity to move between the concrete and the abstract” (4).
Thus, as our faculty looks forward to the next five years with this Strategic Plan, we do so with a healthy apprehension about what’s to come, but also with the confidence that we have a significant role to play in shepherding our communities through it.
Dr. Jennifer Andrews
Dean, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences

Now that we have a Strategic Plan to guide our work from now until 2030, our focus will shift to implementation by detailing the initiatives and corresponding measures of progress required to advance our collective work. The Action Items provide key specific targets and offer tangible next steps. We will review and update the Faculty on these items as the environment shifts, through bi-annual progress reports to Faculty Council.