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Author Archive for Ryan Schutt – Page 3

Call for Proposals: Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University

Deadline for Proposals: March 1st, 2016

The Center for the Study of Social Difference at Columbia University (CSSD) promotes innovative interdisciplinary scholarship on the role of gender, sexuality, ethnicity, and race in global dynamics of power and inequality. As the umbrella organization and research hub for five interdisciplinary programs,[1] CSSD brings together faculty in humanities, law, social science and the arts, to investigate problems of social, economic, and cultural inequality. CSSD working groups challenge the disciplinary divides among the humanities, the arts, and the social sciences by asking not only how historical categories of social difference intersect on the level of identity, but also how these categories shape institutions, modes of knowing, acts of representation, and processes of globalization. The Center creates the conditions for scholars, artists and practitioners to work collaboratively on themes of common interest and to set intellectual agendas for the future.

CSSD welcomes proposals for a new project that would begin in 2016. Proposals may be submitted for consideration by any Columbia or Barnard faculty member(s) whose project aligns with the mission of CSSD (please see our website: socialdifference.columbia.edu), although preference will be given to faculty affiliated with one or more of CSSD’s member centers and institutes. This year we particularly welcome proposals that address the theme, broadly conceived, of “Reframing Gendered Violence.”

Funding is in the amount of $35,000 over two years with the possibility of $15,000 for a third year, contingent on working group interest and the availability of Center funds. CSSD seeks projects that are interdisciplinary in nature and favors proposals from an already-constituted core working group (usually 5-8 people). Center support is seed money to enable working groups to get off the ground; it is the expectation of the Center that all projects will also seek additional funding.

Center projects typically run for three years, but 2-year projects will also be considered. In 3-year projects, year 1 concentrates on focused project development, including the constitution of a regional and/or international working group, exploratory seminars, and guest lectures or workshops. Year 2 involves the most intensive intellectual work, featuring regular meetings of the working group, and the active participation of fellows and affiliates. Year 3 is often dedicated to post-project planning and dissemination of the project’s work through a conference, the publication of conference proceedings and/or edited collections of working group scholarship, or online publication of syllabi or other curricular materials.

Current working group projects include “The Digital Black Atlantic,” “Gender and the Global Slum,” “Social Justice After the Welfare State,” “Pacific Climate Circuits: Moving Beyond Science, Technology, Engineering, and Economics,” “The Legacy of Bandung Humanisms,” and  “The Rural-Urban Interface: Gender and Poverty in Ghana and Kenya, Statistics and Stories.”  Please see our website for detailed descriptions of all our projects and for additional information about the Center.

CSSD project support budgets may be used by project directors at their discretion.  However, budgets typically include the following:  Course relief for a project director (one course per year for two years, alternating in the case of co-project directors); stipends for two graduate student participants and one graduate assistant responsible for program support; working group meeting lunches and/or breakfasts; limited support for visiting scholars, public conferences and publications. Project directors should be prepared to work with the Center to seek additional funding sources.

Project proposals should not exceed five double-spaced pages and should include a project description, a provisional budget, a short CV for each tentative working group member, and a detailed work plan for group meetings, public events, and the dissemination of project research. Proposals should also describe a plan for soliciting and adjudicating applications for working group membership from the wider University community. Any anticipated curricular or pedagogical outcomes of the proposed project should be noted.

Proposals should be directed to CSSD Associate Director Laura Ciolkowski ([email protected]), by or before March 1, 2016.  A sample CSSD project proposal is available by request.  Projects will be selected by the CSSD Executive Committee. All applicants will be notified by April 11, 2016.

Call for Contributions to Open track at the joint 4S/EASST conference

Panel: Unravelling craft, technology and practical knowledge at the 4S/EASST Conference, August 31 – September 3, 2016.

Deadline: February  21, 2016

Craftwork has long been synonymous with handmade, bodily engagements with tools and materials. New, often digital, technologies are currently reconfiguring craftwork in unexpected ways, and these emerging craft-technology practices are opening up new domains for generative material thinking and sensory practical knowledge. This intersection of craft and thought, making and knowing, tradition and innovation is the focus of this session.

This panel invites creative contributions that engage with the re-conceptualisation, re-invention and re-enactment of craft practices in contemporary life, using a broad definition of craft. We specifically call for reflexive collaborative work that brings craftspeople/practitioners/artists and academics/theorists together in dialogue, not necessarily only verbally.

Topics addressed might include:

  • Alternative sites of craft and knowledge production such as the maker movement, fablabs and artistic research
  • Intersections between craft and knowledge economy, in particular cases such as the textile industry
  • Cases of sensory knowledge as shaped by/through (digital) technologies
  • Changing notions of skilled work and craftsmanship in professional and artistic fields such as architecture, design, medicine and engineering

 If you would like to discuss the relevance of your paper to the open track or how a more practical session might work, please contact [email protected] and [email protected].

The calls for all the tracks for the 2016 conference can be found at:

http://www.nomadit.co.uk/easst/easst_4s2016/panels.php5?View=All%20Themes

The panel can be found at: http://www.nomadit.co.uk/easst/easst_4s2016/panels.php5?PanelID=3932

More information about the conference at: http://www.sts2016bcn.org/

Job Opportunity: University of Cambridge Lectureship in Science, Technology and Medicine before 1800

Applications are invited for a permanent University Lectureship in Science, Technology and Medicine before 1800, to start on 1 September 2016 or as soon as possible thereafter. Responsibilities will include contributing to all aspects of undergraduate and graduate teaching, supervising and examining, leading research work in early science, medicine and technology, and various administrative duties for the Department.

Applicants must hold a PhD (or equivalent) and have an outstanding record of excellence in teaching, research and publication in this area. The Department offers an exceptionally stimulating and supportive interdisciplinary research environment and the opportunity to develop undergraduate and graduate teaching in the post-holder’s areas of expertise.

Further particulars and information on how to apply are available at: www.hps.cam.ac.uk

Once an offer of employment has been accepted, the successful candidate will be required to undergo a basic disclosure (criminal records check) check.

To apply online for this vacancy, please click on the ‘Apply’ button below. This will route you to the University’s Web Recruitment System, where you will need to register an account (if you have not already) and log in before completing the online application form.

Applicants are able to upload a maximum of 3 three documents. These should be arranged as follows:

1.) cover letter, curriculum vitae and full list of publications combined into one document. Please include weblinks or doi’s for your publications, where possible

2.) details of teaching experience and research interests

3.) three samples of recent work. If you are unable to upload your work samples, please email these as attachments to [email protected], ensuring that you include your surname in email subject line and in the file names.

Closing Date: Monday, 1 February 2016

Job talks and informal meetings: 19, 20 and 21 April 2016

Start Date: 1 September 2016

For additional information, please refer to the website through this link: http://www.jobs.cam.ac.uk/job/8508/

Call for Applications: Center for Science and Society Seed Grants

 

Eligibility: All full-time students, faculty, and postdocs at Columbia University and Barnard College

Amount of Award: $1,500 – 3,000

Deadline: February 22, 2016

The Center for Science and Society at Columbia University invites proposals for innovative interdisciplinary projects involving the study of science in society that need modest amounts of seed money to initiate collaborative research and programming. All full-time faculty, students, and postdocs at Columbia University and Barnard College are eligible, and proposals are welcomed especially from undergraduate and graduate students. Projects might include small research projects, support for a reading group, inviting a speaker, or a contribution towards developing a conference. Grants can be combined with any other funding held by the applicants. Awards will normally be in the range of $1,500-$3,000. Projects must be completed and funds expended by July 1, 2017.

Submitting Proposals
To apply, please submit the following as a single PDF document by 5:00 p.m. EST on Monday, February 22, 2016 to Dr. Melinda Miller, Associate Director, The Center for Science and Society, ([email protected]) with “Seed Grants for Interdisciplinary Projects in Science and Society” in the subject line of the email:

  • Cover page, including title of proposal, principal investigator(s) and departmental affiliations, an executive summary of the project, and the total funding amount sought
  • Proposal narrative with timeline of research (no more than 3 pages in 12-point font)
  • Itemized projected budget
  • CVs for each investigator

Conditions of Receipt
Grant recipients must provide annual reports on project activities, including updates on external funding proposals (successful or unsuccessful), and any papers, publications, course syllabi, and/or reports resulting from seed grant activities. When applicable, research projects involving human subjects and/or animals must obtain (and keep current) approval from the appropriate University regulatory offices.

For more information, please contact The Center for Science and Society at Columbia University.

Call for Applications: Post-Doctoral Fellowship at the Stevanovich Institute on the Formation of Knowledge

The Stevanovich Institute on the Formation of Knowledge has posted advertisements inviting applications for its first two-year postdoctoral fellowship. The application deadline is February 1st, 2016.

Applicants are required to hold a PhD by the start of their appointment (on or about July 1st, 2016) and must demonstrate current research interests tied to SIFK’s 2016-18 multidisciplinary approach to the question of Comparing Practices of Knowledge (http://sifk.uchicago.edu/research-theme). The postdoctoral fellowship is an opportunity for future academic leaders to conduct paradigm-shifting research, hone their undergraduate teaching skills, and forge personal and academic relationships across disciplinary boundaries.

Further information about the opportunity and details on how to apply can be found on the SIFK web site at (http://sifk.uchicago.edu/page/postdoctoral-fellowships) and on the University of Chicago Academic Career Opportunities portal at http://tinyurl.com/zpb8ohu for posting 02885.

Call for Applications: 2016-17 Beckman Center Fellowships in the History of Science, Medicine, Technology, and Industry

The Beckman Center for the History of Chemistry at the Chemical Heritage Foundation (CHF), an independent research library in Philadelphia, PA, invites applications for short-term and long-term fellowships in the history of science, medicine, technology, and industry (http://www.chemheritage.org/research/beckman-center/beckman-center-fellowships/apply.aspx).

Short-term fellows are particularly meant to use the collections, while long-term fellows’ work must help to support the mission of the institution and fit with collections more generally.

We support roughly 20 fellows each year, creating a vibrant international community of scholars whose work is in some way tied to the history of materials and materiality, chemistry, and all related sciences. Applications come from scholars in a wide range of disciplines across the humanities and social sciences.

To see this year’s list, go to: http://www.chemheritage.org/research/beckman-center/fellows-and-staff.aspx.

Senior Fellowships

  • 1 or 2 Semesters in Residence
  • Available to those who received their PhD before July 2011
  • $30,000/Semester

Postdoctoral Fellowships

  • 9 Months in Residence
  • Available to those who received their PhD after July 2011
  • $45,000

Dissertation Fellowships

  • 9 Months in Residence
  • Open to graduate students at the dissertation stage
  • $26,000

Short-Term Fellowships

  • 1–4 Months in Residence
  • Open to all scholars and researchers
  • $3,000 per month

Application Deadline: January 15, 2016

For more information visit:

www.chemheritage.org/BeckmanCenter

Call for Proposals: Expertise from Margin to Center: Science, Politics, and Democracy Graduate Conference

Deadline:  January 29, 2016

Abstracts should be approximately 800 words, include the name of the author(s), and their institutional affiliation(s). Successful applicants will be informed by February 12th, and full paper drafts will be circulated among participants in mid-March. Please submit your extended abstract in PDF to [email protected].

The conference will consist of paper sessions with up to 5 participants, and each session will be presided over by a graduate student and a faculty discussant. The event will take place from April 14th to 15th, 2016 at Columbia University.

For additional information about the conference and the applications process, please consult the graduate conference website.

Call for Applications: PhD Candidate Position in the History of Art, Science and Technology, Utrecht University

There is an opening for a part-time PhD Candidate position at Utrecht University on the sub-project, “The Science of Technique, 1750-1950,” under the major project, “Technique in the Arts: Practices, Concepts, Expertise (1500-1950)”. The focus of this sub-project is on the development of a science-based conservation practice and the establishment of museum laboratories in the nineteenth and first half of the twentieth centuries. This project is funded by the European Research Council, by way of a Consolidator Grant awarded to principal investigator (PI) Prof. Dr. Sven Dupré.  The selected candidate will be based at Utrecht University and will as such also be part of the department History and Art History, Section Art History, and the Descartes Centre for the History and Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities.

For additional details, and to apply, please visit the application website.

Call for Applications: Postdoctoral Position in the History of Art, Science and Technology, Utrecht University

A postdoctoral position is available at Utrecht University on the project “Technique in the Arts: Practices, Concepts, Expertise (1500-1950)”. This project is funded by the European Research Council, by way of a Consolidator Grant awarded to principal investigator (PI) Prof. Dr. Sven Dupré.  The selected postdoc will be based at Utrecht University and will as such also be part of the department History and Art History, Section Art History, and the Descartes Centre for the History and Philosophy of the Sciences and the Humanities.

For additional details, and to apply, please visit the application website.

London Science Museum Launches the Dana Research Centre and Library

On November 9, 2015 the London Science Museum Library re-opened as the new Dana Research Centre and Library.  The Science Museum’s Dana Research Centre and Library is the home to its library and archive services in London and to the Research & Public History department.

As envisioned by the Science Museum, the new Centre will provide a “world class environment” for academic research and it will be open to the public as well. A valuable resource for history of science research, the library holds approximately 5,500 volumes on open shelving, and terminals to access digital resources. Selected archives and items from library collections are also available for transport from the facilities in Wroughton, including an extensive selection of works on scientific instruments.  Open shelving holdings may be rotated based on reader demand, and feedback and requests are welcomed.

The Library catalogue is available at https://smg.koha-ptfs.co.uk/ and a new catalogue for the Archive will launch in mid-November.

More information can be found on the Dana Research Centre and Library website.


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