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Author Archive for Melinda Miller – Page 3

Job Opportunity: VISTA Program Director, York University

York University is currently seeking a 7-year staff appointment: Program Director for our new VISTA (Vision: Science to Applications) Program. This will be the most senior staff position in the program, which will involve a large budget, many York vision researchers, staff, and trainees, and over 50 partner organizations. Required qualifications include management experience and a Masters or PhD degree.

Location: York University, Toronto, Canada

Eligibility: Management experience and a Masters or PhD degree

Deadline: open until filled

For more information, please visit: http://webapps.yorku.ca/nonacademicpostings/summary-pf.jsp?postingnumber=10099.

Call for Abstracts: Understanding Material Loss Across Time and Space

The Understanding Material Loss Conference will take place at the University of Birmingham, UK, 17-18 February and intends to examine the usefulness of ‘loss’ as an analytical framework across different disciplines and subfields, but principally within historical studies.

Abstracts and proposals for papers and panels must be submitted by Friday, October 14.

Understanding Material Loss Conference seeks to uncover the multiple practices and institutions that emerged in response to different forms of material loss in the past and asks, how has loss shaped (and been shaped by) processes of acquisition, possession, stability, abundance and permanence? By doing so it seeks to gauge the extent to which ‘loss’ can be used as an organizing framework of study across different disciplines and subfields. Understanding Material Loss seeks papers from across a variety of time periods and geographies. Although open and speculative in nature, this conference will focus on three broad topics within the wider rubric of loss, in order to facilitate meaningful conversations and exchanges.

Using Materials

  • How has the ‘loss’ of particular materials affected scientific practice, manufacturing, architectural design or development in the past?
  • How have humans responded to the partial loss or decay of materials?
  • How have ‘lost’ skills or knowledge affected the use of materials?
  • How have humans re-appropriated or recycled seemingly damaged or obsolete materials?

Possessing Objects

  • How have humans sought to maintain and mark the ownership of objects?
  • How has the loss of possessions and property affected human mobility and constructions of identity?
  • How have communities historically responded to the loss of particular objects? When and why have they sought to stave off the loss of things?
  • Where, when and how have cultures of repair flourished?
  • How has the loss of possessions and property (or the potential for loss) affected processes of production, consumption or financial stability?

Inhabiting Sites and Spaces

  • When and why have particular sites or buildings been understood as destroyed or obsolete?
  • How have past societies responded to the loss of particular sites?
  • When and how have landscapes been actively purged of symbols and sites?
  • How have past societies worked to rebuild or reclaim particular sites?
  • What strategies did past societies develop to ensure the resilience of certain structures?

Please visit the conference website for additional details.

Please send proposals (250 words max per paper) for papers and panels to conference organizer Kate Smith ([email protected]) by Friday 14 October 2016. Papers should not exceed 20 minutes. Roundtable panels featuring 5-6 papers of 10 minutes each or other innovative formats are encouraged.

Job Opportunity: Project Manager, The Center for Science and Society

The Center for Science and Society (CSS) at Columbia University seeks a Project Manager who will demonstrate superb multi-tasking skills and independent judgement when working with staff and associated faculty to support the program’s activities, events, and research. The Project Manager will be responsible for organizing and executing all activities related to CSS lectures, events and meetings; overseeing program finances and grants; and facilitating digital communications, promotion, and social media outreach. Additionally, the successful applicant will support the History in Action (HIA) Program, a grant-sponsored program in the History Department, and its associated events, programs, website and budget.

Requirements:  A Bachelor’s degree or equivalent and a minimum 2 years of related work experience, preferably in an event management role with financial responsibilities within a university or non-profit setting. Academic background in history or history of science and technology is a plus.

TO APPLY: Please see the Jobs at Columbia (JAC) posting for further information. All applications must be made through JAC.

Job Opportunity: Project Manager, Presidential Scholars in Society and Neuroscience

The Presidential Scholars in Society and Neuroscience (PSSN) program at Columbia University seeks an energetic and organized Project Manager who will work with administrative staff, postdoctoral scholars, and associated faculty to support the program’s activities, events, and research. The Project Manager will be responsible for organizing and executing all activities related to PSSN seminars, events and meetings; overseeing program finances and grants; and facilitating digital communications, promotion, and social media outreach.

Requirements:  A Bachelor’s degree or equivalent and a minimum 2 years of related work experience, preferably in an event management role with financial responsibilities within a university or non-profit setting. Academic background in neuroscience, psychology and/or the history of science and technology preferred.

TO APPLY: Please see the Jobs at Columbia (JAC) posting for further information. All applications must be made through JAC.

2016 Presidential Scholars in Society and Neuroscience Announced

This July, the Columbia University Presidential Scholars in Society and Neuroscience program will welcome its second cohort of Presidential Scholars. The three incoming postdoctoral scholars were selected from a a highly competitive pool of more than 130 applicants from a variety of backgrounds and fields of research. Scholars were selected based on their comprehensive, multidisciplinary knowledge and novel research proposals. The selection process was a cross-disciplinary effort, with 30 faculty members participating in the proposal review and on-campus interviews from the Faculty of Arts & Sciences, Columbia University Medical Center, Zuckerman Mind Brain Behavior Institute, School of Journalism, School for International and Public Affairs, Teachers College, New York State Psychiatric Institute, and Barnard College. Scholars will confirm at least two faculty mentors from different departments who will help to guide and support their independent research. The Scholars also help to organize the PSSN Seminars in Society and Neuroscience series, which will start up again in the fall.

2016 Scholars:2016 Presidential Scholars in Society and Neuroscience

Matteo Farinella, Cartoonist, Science Communicator; PhD (2013) University College of London, Computational Neuroscience
Proposal Title: Visual Narratives for Science Communication

Nori Jacoby, Postdoctoral Fellow, Massachusetts Institute of Technology; PhD (2015) The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Computational Neuroscience
Proposal Title: The Cultural Foundations of Auditory Processing

Lan A. Li, PhD (2016), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, History of Science and Medicine
Proposal Title: Visible Physiologies: Mapping Peripheral Sensation and Technologies of Touch

 

Learn more about the Presidential Scholars in Society and Neuroscience program at Columbia

 

Call for Papers: Panel Study of Income Dynamics Annual User Conference 2016

PSID announces a call for papers for the first Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) Annual Data User Conference, September 15-16, 2017 at the University of Michigan. Submissions are invited on any topics that use data from PSID or one of its major supplements, such as the Child Development Supplement, the Transition into Adulthood Supplement, the Disability and Use of Time supplement, the Family Rosters and Transfers Module, or the Childhood Retrospective Circumstances Study. Scholars from all disciplines are welcome.

Between 15 and 25 papers and posters will be accepted for the conference. Travel and lodging expenses will be available for one author per accepted paper or poster. Meals will be provided for all participants.

Proposals (1,000 words or less) will be accepted until June 17, 2016 through the online application portal.

Support for this event is provided by the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute on Child Health and Human Development, the National Institute on Aging, and the National Science Foundation.

 

Call for Proposals: Course Development in Science and Society


Eligibility
: All core lecturers and tenured or tenure-track faculty at Columbia University and Barnard College

Amount of Award: $3,000

Deadline: September 1, 2016

The Columbia University Center for Science and Society invites proposals for the development of new undergraduate curricular offerings in the study of science and society. The aim is to introduce courses that can be offered within current disciplinary structures, as part of already-existing majors and concentrations, but that bring significant discussion of science and society into these offerings. For a list of previously funded courses, please visit the Course Development page.

This competition is open to Core Lecturers and tenured or tenure-track faculty at Columbia University (including Barnard) in any discipline. Successful applicants will receive a $3,000 research allowance to be used for the development and teaching of the course over the following two years. If the course is to be co-taught, the instructors will split the award. Tenured faculty must use the entire award to support research for the course (e.g. book purchases or photocopying) and to hire a student to provide research and/or teaching assistance. Awardees will commit to teaching the course within two years of the start of the grant.

To Apply: Please download and complete the application form, below. All materials must be submitted to Deborah Coen ([email protected]), Director of Research Clusters and Curriculum, The Center for Science and Society, by September 1, 2016. Proposals will be judged by a multi-disciplinary panel drawn from the steering committee of the Center for Science and Society.

Download (PDF, 371KB)

 

Call for Applications: History in Action Project Awards

The History in Action Initiative is pleased to announce the History in Action Project Award (HAPA) for Spring / Summer 2016, which is part of the AHA-Mellon Career Diversity Initiative at Columbia University. The HAPA enables financial assistance for History graduate students to initiate or sustain a project that contributes directly to the mission of public history – meshing academic research and public outreach – and to create valuable relationships between the Department of History and communities elsewhere.

What’s New:

HIA seeks to provide students with the resources to execute ever-more elaborate and extensive projects.  With this goal in mind, HAPA 2.0 offers a larger award (up to $3,000) to be used over a seven-month period.

Application Deadline: March 21, 2016, 5:00pm

Eligibility:

  1. Applicants must be current PhD students in good standing in the Department of History at Columbia University.
  2. Grantees must be available to attend and participate in the fourth annual HIA conference, to be held January 19-20, 2017.
  3. Grantees will attend HIA events or write about their projects for the HIA website (and/or the AHA Today blog) at the request of HIA staff.

For more information and to apply, please visit the History in Action website.

Call for Applications: RWJ Health Policy Research Scholars

The goal of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Policy Research Scholars is to create a large cadre of diverse doctoral students from multiple (nonclinical, research-focused) disciplines—students whose research, connections, and leadership will inform and influence policy toward a Culture of Health. Specifically, we aim to recruit doctoral students from a variety of social sciences (e.g., urban planning, health, economics, ethnography, education, social work, etc.) who are training to be researchers.

Eligibility: For the 2016 cohort, the Health Policy Research Scholars program will enroll up to 50 scholars who are interested in health policy research and from underrepresented populations and/or disadvantaged backgrounds. Examples of eligible individuals include, but are not limited to, first-generation college graduates, individuals from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, individuals from racial and ethnic groups underrepresented in doctoral programs, and individuals with disabilities. Health Policy Research Scholars will be completed concurrently with the doctoral program and is designed to enhance and enrich the doctoral program.

Please see application guidelines on the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation website for full details and to apply.

Application Deadline: April 19, 2016, 3:00 PM ET

Science, Knowledge and Technology Workshop (SKAT) – Graduate Student Series

The SKAT workshop is a forum for the seminar-style presentation and discussion of graduate student work in the sociology of expertise, the sociology of professions, actor-network approaches, medical sociology, science studies, etc. The workshop is hosted by Columbia Sociology but welcomes graduate students from all institutions and disciplines.

All events are held at the following time and location

Time: ​11:30am – 12:30pm​

Location: ​501D ​Knox Hall, Columbia University, New York, NY

The dates for Spring 2016 are as follows:

  • February 1 – Daniel Wojtkiewicz (Columbia University),  The Production of Medical Diagnosis in Autism: Genetic Tests in Clinical Practice
  • February 22 – Adam Leeds (University of Pennsylvania), Assembling the Economic Mechanism: Soviet Economics 1937-1965 and the Technology of Socialist Government
  • March 7  Mary X. Mitchell (University of Pennsylvania),  Professional Marshallese:’ Cold War Rationality and the Death of Advocacy
  • March 21 – Moran Levy (Columbia University), Trial and Error: How Anticancer Drugs Shaped Cancer Science
  • April 4 – Luciana de Souza Leão and Gil Eyal (Columbia University), Experiments in the Wild: a Historical Perspective on the Rise of Randomized Controlled Trials in International Development
  • April 14-15 – Graduate Student Conference at Columbia University: Expertise from Margin to Center: Science, Politics, and Democracy
  • April 18 – Mihai-Dan Cirjan (Central European University and New York University), Talking about Work: Romanian Psychotechnics and the Evaluation of Labour after the Interwar Capitalist Crisis
  • May 2 – Abigail Coplin (Columbia University), The Limits of Politicized Science: Scientists and the State During China’s GMO Controversy

For more information, please visit the SKAT website.


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