Polygon Created with Sketch. Home | Research

Skills for the Post-Pandemic World Series

The future of work continues to be a major area of focus for the Future Skills Centre and our partners at the Public Policy Forum and at the Diversity Institute. Indeed, the advent of COVID-19 has steepened trajectories and intensified shifts associated with trends long discussed in the discourse around the future of work, meaning that this work has become more relevant than ever.

The Skills for the Post-Pandemic World project tackles key questions facing policymakers, employers, training providers and workers. It is urgent that society turn to face the fundamental changes in the labour market precipitated by the COVID-19 pandemic, and many players must rise to meet the new conditions of a post-pandemic world.

The pandemic has dragged the future of work into the present: digitization, work from home, and many other long predicted developments are here now, and likely to stay.

Building on the collaborative success of the Skills Next series, the Public Policy Forum (PPF) and the Diversity Institute (DI), and with new support from Microsoft, join us once more to face these rapid societal shifts head-on, with research looking at the future of skills, training and retraining in ways that will chart a path forward as the pandemic continues to unfold.

The goal of this series is to build a robust policy ecosystem that supports the mobility needed for workers and employers to navigate the new reality. The key shifts being created and accelerated by the pandemic, as well as the key research themes for the series, are identified in a scoping report that serves to introduce the project. These eight themes are each explored in separate report focused on the following key topics:

Stay tuned for more information on upcoming convening and consultation events, as well as forthcoming reports.

For more information, please contact Andrée Loucks, Policy Lead at aloucks@ppforum.ca.

The Skills for a Post-Pandemic World series is funded by the Government of Canada’s Future Skills Centre.

Related Research

A woman in a grey blazer and a man in a blue shirt sit on wooden tiered seating, focused on a digital tablet they are holding together in a modern, sunlit atrium.
Research

Pathways to Opportunity: Addressing Barriers to Labour Force Participation in a Changing World of Work

Pathways to Opportunity is an evidence-informed pilot that supports social assistance clients facing complex barriers to employment. This report describes the service model, its rationale, objectives, and key elements.
A diverse group of high school students sits around a table in a bright classroom, listening to a teacher who is perched on a desk near a whiteboard with math equations.
Research

Mapping Youth Pathways from Education to Employment: What We Know and How to Strengthen Supports Across Canada

This brief is part of a broader effort to strengthen Canada’s understanding of how best to support youth in their journey from school to work.
Two coworkers smiling and collaborating at a computer in an office.
Research

Supporting Inclusive Work-Integrated Learning as an Employer

Work-integrated learning and placements are critical bridges to employment. Employers who offer inclusive placements can access a wider talent pool, improve retention and performance, and foster innovation through diverse perspectives.
View all Research