Thank you for your question.
It comes down to financial support, or even oversight by the federal granting councils, of the production of knowledge in French, and making it accessible and disseminating it in French-language minority communities and universities. I think we can start with that.
We cannot require that a researcher submit their grant applications in French or in English. However, I can tell you about our observation, which Professor Lewis has also made: there is an idea among francophone researchers that our success rate at obtaining grants and an international reputation depends on our willingness to produce knowledge in English.
Does that require the granting councils, the federal actors and the universities themselves to promote knowledge in French more? I think that is how it will happen. Why do many francophone researchers make the choice to switch from French to English? Surely there is a reason for that and the success rate at obtaining grants is a factor. We have figures that show that francophone researchers who submit grant applications in French, including to the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, have proportionately less success.
Recently, I was asked to help, as a reviewer, in the study of about 80 grant applications from all over Canada, including the Université de Sherbrooke, the Université du Québec à Montréal, the Université de Montréal, the University of Ottawa, and the University of Calgary. Absolutely all those applications were written in English, although some of them came from entirely francophone teams.
What is going on among francophone researchers? Have they given up because they know the success rate is too low? I don't have the answer to that, but I think the federal government has to promote knowledge in French. It does that now, but it can do it more. It also has to offer more support for the three granting councils. In addition, we have to recall that grants have not been reviewed for several years. We should maybe think about that, particularly for francophone researchers.