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Author Archive for Hiba Seager – Page 12

Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship for Art Historical Research

The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation will enable one predoctoral candidate annually to base part of his/her PhD-research in the history of art. This is a one-year Fellowship, with the possibility of renewal for one additional year. Applications should include an outline of the proposed research, related to the Rijksmuseum’s holdings, in which objects are fundamental. A suitable project might entail research into art objects as artistic or historical sources or object-related archival research. The Fellow’s progress will be assessed in consultation with his/her supervisors at the university and the Rijksmuseum, to determine if the renewal of the Fellowship for a second year is desirable. The Fellowship will preferably result in a publication, the content and form of which will be decided by the Fellow and his/her academic supervisors in consultation with the Rijksmuseum. The Rijksmuseum will provide working space for the Fellows, in order to stimulate an exchange of knowledge, ideas and experience. Access will be provided to all necessary information in the museum, as well as to the library and the resources of the Netherlands Institute for Art History (RKD) in The Hague.

The closing date for all applications is Sunday, March 12, 2017 at 6:00 p.m. (Amsterdam time/CET), but candidates are encouraged to apply at their earliest convenience. No applications will be accepted after the deadline. All applications must be submitted online and in English. Applications or related materials delivered via email, postal mail, or in person will not be accepted. More information on this opportunity can be found here.

The University of Cape Town – M.Phil Program in Environmental Humanities

The University of Cape Town has launched a new transdisciplinary M.Phil program specialising in the Environmental Humanities, as well as an active research project called Environmental Humanities South, which includes funded Masters and Doctoral fellowships. Applicants are welcome from all disciplines in the Humanities, particularly applicants from literary studies, film and media, and the creative arts. A number of fellowships at M Phil and PhD level are available.

The environmental humanities is the term for a dynamic and growing field in universities across the world, one promoting interdisciplinary scholarship that explores how we understand the relations between humans and the environment in all areas of cultural production. Ranging from scientific modelling to government policy, from social justice movements to the creative arts, it examines questions of sustainability, human wellbeing and the environment in their broadest sense.  In a 21st-century context of increasing pressure on the biosphere, the environmental humanities provide a vital intellectual space that enables researchers, students, artists, writers, scientists, policy-makers and practitioners to reflect critically on the concepts that underlie contemporary environmentalism.

The next program commences in March 2017. Applications for admission to the M Phil and the PhD will be considered until February 2017. For more details, please visit the opportunity’s website.

Call for Submissions: STEM and Beyond? Informal Science Learning Across Disciplines

This one day workshop will develop dialogue on informal learning (i.e. that happening outside of teaching institutions), focusing upon STEM (science, technology, engineering and medicine) subjects, SAH (social sciences, arts and humanities) subjects and relationships between the two. It recognises the ‘STEM agenda’ as a political force that has shaped ideas and practices around informal learning and science communication over the past fifteen years. The workshop will focus upon successes and challenges, providing an opportunity to critically reflect on the STEM agenda and its impacts. By taking seriously the role of science communication in the arts, humanities and social sciences, and their relationships with STEM, the workshop will address a neglected area of research and provide a platform for developing and improving informal learning practice.

This call for contributors seeks research papers, performance pieces and reflections on experiences of existing practice or future directions in informal learning and science communication across the disciplines. Contributions are welcomed addressing both trends over time in informal science communication and specific examples. Contributions are also welcomed that celebrate successes or signpost weaknesses and failures. By drawing these together the workshop will support cross-disciplinary dialogue on the politics and practice of informal science learning, across and beyond the conventional boundaries of STEM.

Please submit titles and 300 word abstracts for contributions to [email protected]  by Friday, February 6th, 2017.

More information on this opportunity can be found here.

Call for Submissions: 11th Annual Science in Public Conference

The Science in Public Research Network will hold its 11th Annual Conference on the theme of ‘Science, Technology and Humanity’ on 10th – 12th July 2017 at the University of Sheffield.

Science and technology are essential ingredients of our humanity. The emergence of fruitful and diverse scholarly perspectives on the history, practice, communication, governance and impacts of scientific knowledge reflects this fact. Yet rapid scientific and technological change has also unsettled the idea of what it means to be human; for example, through new frontiers in physical and cognitive enhancement, shift to knowledge economies, and potential threats to employment from mass automation. These changes take place in a context of broader challenges to expertise and evidence, dramatically illustrated by the EU referendum and the election of Donald Trump. Taking these matters seriously calls for a renewed focus on compassion, benevolence and civilization. This year at Science in Public, we ask:

How do science and technology affect what it means to be human?

We invite proposals for panels, debates, performances, films and other forms of dialogue or practice from a wide range of disciplines – including STS, history of science, science communication, sociology, law, disability studies, geography, urban studies, development studies – that reflect on this question.

Submit proposals by January 31st 2017 at bit.ly/sip17panels. More information on this opportunity can be found here.

Call for Papers: PErvasive Technologies Related to Assistive Environments (PETRA)

PErvasive Technologies Related to Assistive Environments (PETRA) invites papers for its 10th annual conference. PETRA is a highly interdisciplinary conference that focuses on computational and engineering approaches to improve the quality of life and enhance human performance in a wide range of settings, in the workplace, at home, in public spaces, urban environments, and others. Outcomes of this conference have a broad impact in application areas that include, manufacturing, transportation, healthcare, energy systems, security and safety, robotics, biomedicine, environment and conservation, and many others. PETRA brings together very different types of technologies to also address important social and healthcare issues for sensitive populations, such as the elderly, persons suffering from chronic conditions such as Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s, Cerebral Palsy, and other disabilities or traumas. For more information regarding the conference visit www.petrae.org, or email inquiries to [email protected].  All conference and workshop papers will be published in the ACM conference proceedings (past proceedings available here).

PETRA’17 will be held on the Island of Rhodes, Greece at the Amilia Mare from June 21-23, 2017. The submission deadlines are Jan 15th, 2017 for full papers and workshop proposals, and Feb 12th, 2017 for short and poster papers.

Call for Papers – Scientiae 2017

Proposals are invited for the sixth annual Scientiae conference on disciplines of knowing in the early modern world (roughly 1400-1800), which will take place at the University of Padua, 19-22 April 2017. Our Keynote Speakers will be Paula Findlen (Stanford), Claire Preston (QM London), and Antonio Clericuzio (Roma Tre).

The major premise of this conference series is that knowledge during this period was inherently interdisciplinary, involving complex mixtures of theories, practices and objects, which had yet to be separated into their modern ‘scientific’ configurations. Although centred on attempts to understand and control the natural world, Scientiaeaddresses natural philosophy, natural history, and the scientiae mixtae within a wide range of related fields, including but not restricted to Biblical exegesis, medicine, artisan practice and theory, logic, humanism, alchemy, magic, witchcraft, demonology, divinatory practices, astronomy, astrology, music, antiquarianism, experimentation and commerce.

This year attention is especially given to the history of early modern knowledge and erudition, the history of universities, particularly though not exclusively the history of the university of Padua, as well as the history of the book and the history of political thought.

Please email your 250-word abstract, together with a one-page CV to scientiaepadua [at] gmail.com.

The deadline for abstract submission is 15 December 2016. We shall be notifying the selection outcome by 15 January. Please visit the website for more details.

NYBG Humanities Institute: Advertising Call for Mellon Fellows at Columbia Online

The Humanities Institute is pleased to offer an Andrew W. Mellon Fellowship for the year 2017 for graduate students and post-doctoral researchers. Potential fellows are invited to submit an application for a project Fellowship that would expand the Garden’s role in humanities scholarship.

Fellows will conduct research that involves innovative interdisciplinary approaches to areas such as landscape and garden design, environmental history and policy, urban design and urban social history, and cultural anthropology, exploration, botanical illustration and book-arts with a primary focus on areas that connect the built and natural landscape to the human experience.

Please visit the fellowship’s website for more details.

Job Opportunity: Museum Curator (History of Modern Science) – Smithsonian Institution

This position is located within the Office of Curatorial Affairs, Division of Medicine and Science – within the National Museum of American History.

The employee is responsible for carrying out research and publications, developing and managing collections, developing exhibitions, providing public service by responding to inquiries about 20th century history of science, and furthering education and outreach.

Duties:

  • Researches the history of modern science through objects and collections as well as traditional sources of documentation in areas that stretch from the early twentieth century to the present.
  • Assists the Division in collecting, managing, and interpreting large and diverse collections that provide the basis for interpreting the history of modern science in the context of the American experience.
  • Plays a role in helping to curate the Museum’s exhibitions on the history of modern science from an American perspective.
  • Assists with the development of public programs on the history of science.

The application is due December 2, 2016. Please visit the job listing’s website for more details.

Research Fellowship – The Jacques Loeb Centre for the History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences

The Jacques Loeb Centre for the History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences is offering research fellowships for two projects starting in the 2017-18 academic year. The fellowships are for PhD and post-doctoral students as well as visiting research students and scholars.
  • The first project examines the intellectual history of modern structural and informational biology and the philosophies behind the researchers’ work.
  • The second project explores the role of basic research in Germany starting in the 19th century, its further development by German-Jewish refugees in the US and subsequent work on molecular embryology and medical applications in the US and Israel.
Researchers for both projects must have expertise in philosophy, biology, and/or the history of science. Please visit the center’s website for more details.

Call for Applications: Columbia Population Research Center Faculty Seed Grants

The Columbia Population Research Center (CPRC) is pleased to issue its annual request for proposals. The CPRC seed grant program is made possible by funds from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development (NICHD), the Columbia University Office of the Provost, and the Institute for Social and Economic Research and Policy (ISERP). The goal of the CPRC seed grant program is to advance intellectually innovative research projects in population, health, and society to the point where they can attract external funding.

Substantively, the CPRC is interested in proposals that 1) focus on the CPRC’s four primary research areas; 2) link cutting-edge research in neuroscience with the social, behavioral, or health sciences; 3) propose globally-focused research in collaboration with a Columbia Global Center(s); and/or 4) develop research methodology. Policy-related research should be oriented toward pressing social issues in the domestic or international arena.

All full-time faculty and research scholars or scientists at Columbia University and its affiliated schools are eligible to apply. Consistent with Columbia University policy, full-time associate research scientists/scholars and postdoctoral research scientists/scholars require prior approval to serve as Principal Investigators and should obtain this prior to applying for a CPRC seed grant.

The submission deadline is January 31, 2017.

For more details on evaluation criteria and application materials, please visit: http://cupop.columbia.edu/services/seed-grant-program.

 


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