Systemic Conflict in Federal Research Funding: Empirical Indication of Bias against Brown South Asian Hindu Canadian Citizens in Canadian Doctoral Scholarship Selection

Authors

  • Arindam Sikdar *

    Department of Bioresource Engineering, McGill University, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, QC H9X 3V9, Canada

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55121/cci.v3i1.1140
Received: 4 February 2026 | Revised: 26 March 2026 | Accepted: 30 March 2026 | Published Online: 15 May 2026

Abstract

Canada is globally recognized as a multicultural and developed nation, yet its foundations lie in the colonial displacement of Indigenous peoples, a history that continues to shape contemporary institutional structures. This study investigates cultural conflict and systemic inequities within Canadian academic institutions, focusing on doctoral scholarship selection processes at national, provincial, university, and foundation levels. Using five years of publicly available NSERC‑CGRSD data from four Canadian universities, the analysis identifies recurring patterns of underrepresentation affecting Brown South Asian Hindu Canadian citizens. Evidence gathered in this research, along with student reports, indicates that this demographic, along with other racialized groups, consistently experiences as marginalized citizens in academic evaluation contexts. These patterns appear to manifest in scholarship and funding decisions where Canadian research contributions may be undervalued, while applicants perceived as white are viewed as receiving disproportionate advantages. Such disparities suggest that historical colonial power structures may continue to influence access to academic opportunities, raising concerns about fairness, transparency, and institutional accountability. Although Canada has recently expanded protections related to religious rights, questions remain regarding the extent to which these policies will be meaningfully implemented within academia and research organizations. Addressing these inequities is essential to ensuring that all qualified domestic scholars, including Brown South Asian Hindu Canadian citizens, receive equitable access to doctoral scholarship opportunities and are not subjected to systematic conflict within academic evaluation systems.

Keywords:

Multiculturalism, National Doctoral Funding, Institutional Funding Discrimination, Misuse of Power Structures, Research Equity, Policy Reform, Brown South Asian Hindu Canadian Citizen, Men Rights

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