This is a blog recording the announcements that are sent out on the CASCA listserv.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

A Walk to Beautiful: A film about women's maternal health in Sub-Saharan Africa - Dalhousie University - May 31

A Walk to Beautiful: A film about women's maternal health in
Sub-Saharan Africa

6pm, Friday, May 31, 2013

Student Union Building,
Dalhousie University,
6136 University Ave, room 307.

Refreshments will be served. WHOI asks for a donation.
____________________________________________________________

The Women's Health International Organization (WHOI) presents a
film-screening of Engel Entertainment's Award Winning film A Walk to
Beautiful. This lyrical and thought-provoking film documents, the
trials, tribulations, and triumphs of several Ethiopian girls and
women who suffer from obstetric fistula. This disease is a
childbirth-derived injury that affects the physical and mental health
of two million women in Africa and Asia. Fistula is the Latin word for
'hole.' This situation occurs in women having prolonged labour in
which a hole or puncture is made in the bladder and, or, rectal wall,
which causes the woman to become incontinent. Known as the 'most
horrific affliction known to humankind,' obstetric fistula was
eradicated in North America in 1925 as a result of the simple and
effective use of caesarian section.

WHOI was founded by teenage health advocate, youth leader, and
community developer, Habiba Cooper Diallo to raise awareness about
obstetric fistula and to assist in its eradication. The screening of
this film is a fund-raiser for the fistula hospital in Addis Ababa,
Ethiopia. WHOI's mandate is to empower women of Africa and the African
Diaspora through health.

Habiba Cooper Diallo is a student of Halifax West High School.
Moreover, she is the winner of Halifax's Zonta Young Women in
Leadership award (2013) Award, and the Lion's Club Halifax Chapter
winning public speaking for her discourse on obstetric fistula (2011).

Kindly support WHOI at this film-screening event. Details are below.

Co-sponsors: African Diaspora Association of the Maritimes (ADAM),
Imhotep Legacy Academy (Dalhousie University), NSPIRG, Black Student
Advisory Committee (Dalhousie University).

CIHR-IPPH May e-Bulletin | e-Bulletin mai IRSC-ISPP

May 29, 2013 | Le 29 mai 2013


ENGLISH VERSION
Contents:
CIHR-IPPH: Help us Communicate What Matters to YOU
Canadian Public Health Association 2013 Annual Conference
Funding Opportunities / Grants / Awards
Calls for Abstracts / Papers
Courses, Workshops and Webinars
Have you Read / Seen?
Calendar of Upcoming Events
Share your Publications and Success Stories
Help us Communicate What Matters to YOU

CIHR-IPPH is interested in generating a profile of our audience and
renewing our communications approaches to better fit your needs.
Please take a moment to complete our short survey.


Canadian Public Health Association 2013 Annual Conference: Moving
Public Health Forward: Evidence, Policy, Practice
Public health professionals, researchers, policy-makers, academics,
students and trainees from across the country and around the world
will meet in Ottawa, Ontario for the Canadian Public Health
Association's 2013 Annual Conference. The gathering will provide
delegates the occasion to explore the new challenges facing public
health and the role different kinds of evidence can play in finding
solutions

Grant Writing 101 June 9, 2013 9:00AM-12:00PM
Peer Review and You: Developing Excellence in Peer Reviewer Practice
June 9, 2013 1:00PM-5:00PM
Pathways to Health Equity for Aboriginal Peoples June 10, 2013
10:30AM-12:00PM
Public Health – Thinking Towards System June 10, 2013 10:30 AM- 12:00PM.
Environments and Health June 10, 2013 2:00PM-3:30PM
Ottawa Convention Centre- June 9-12, 2013.
For more information, visit the website.


Funding Opportunities / Grants / Awards (organized by deadline)
IPPH funding opportunities can be found here by selecting the
Institute of Population and Public Health under the CIHR Institute
dropdown menu.

Canadian Institute for Advanced Research (CIFAR))
Do you have an idea for a research question that requires the
attention of some of the world's best minds, a question whose
ambitious scope and depth will spark transformative inquiry? This is
your opportunity to work with CIFAR to create an interdisciplinary
global research network of leading researchers to address a question
of great importance to humanity and create vital links between
research and society. CIFAR issues its first-ever call for proposals
for new research ideas that address a complex question of importance
to humanity.
For more infromation, visit the website.
Letters of Intent Due June 7, 2013.

2015 Networks of Centres of Excellence (NCE)
The NCE Secretariat has launched a competition to fund new networks
through the Networks of Centres of Excellence (NCE) program. The
program invests in Canadian research and entrepreneurial talent to
translate and apply knowledge, generating economic and social benefits
for Canadians. Networks play an important role in mobilizing some of
the best academic research talent found in Canada, and in engaging
Canadian and international partners in the private, public, and
non-profit sectors. Together, they expand the global knowledge
frontier to develop and implement multifaceted solutions to complex
Canadian issues, which increases the impact of research and
researchtraining on Canada.
For more information, visit the website.
Competition deadline is August 1, 2013.

Institute of Population and Public Health (IPPH) Community Support
(ICS) Program
For more information, visit the website.

Calls for Abstracts / Papers
Fifth International Cancer Control Congress: Call for Abstracts
The Scientific Program Committee is inviting the submission of
Scientific Abstracts in the following subject areas which reflect the
topics of our Plenary Sessions and related Workshops:
1. Improving and sustaining prevention in cancer control
2. Mobilizing all of society for effective cancer control
3. Using data and evidence to improve population health
4. Improving integrated approaches to cancer treatment and care
5. Integrating research, practice and policy priorities to improve
cancer control
For more information, visit the website.
Submission deadline: June 14, 2013.

Global Health Research Capacity Strengthening Program (GHR-CAPS)
Call for Application - Training Bursaries for African Postdoctoral Fellows
The aim of the GHR-CAPS Program is to contribute to the national and
international development of global health research by recruiting and
training researchers who will work in a high-calibre interdisciplinary
environment and whose research will contribute to improving knowledge
in their field. GHR-CAPS provides a varied interuniversity platform
for training in global health that includes courses, seminars,
short-term internships, and an annual summer school.
You must submit your application before 5:00 pm on August 15th 2013 by email

Courses, workshops and webinars
University College London Summer School on the Social Determinants of Health
Applications are now open for the five-day Summer School on the Social
Determinants of Health, organised by the Department of Epidemiology
and Public Health at UCL.
July 8 - 12, 2013
For more information, visit the website.
Population Data British Columbia: Training and Events Updates
For more information, visit the website


Have you Read / Seen?
Launch of New Frontline Health Website
Critical examination of knowledge-to-action models and implications
for promoting health equity
Concours Conception de Capsules Vidéo

Calendar of Upcoming Events

For more information, please visit the website.


Share your Publications and Success Stories
Has your research led to a breakthrough, the development of a new
product/program, or changes in policy and practice? We want to hear
about it! Your story may be featured on our web site or in the next
issue of our Institute newsletter - POP News. Please email your
publications and / or impact stories to Emma Cohen, IPPH Knowledge
Translation and Communications Officer.


VERSION FRANÇAISE
Contenu:

IRSC-ISPP Aidez-nous à diffuser ce qui compte pour VOUS
Conférence annuelle 2013 de L'Association canadienne de santé publique
Possibilités de financement, subventions, et prix
Appel d'abrégés / de communications
Cours, ateliers et webinaires
Avez-vous lu / vu ?
Calendrier d'événements à venir
Partager vos contributions scientifiques ou votre histoire de succès
Aidez-nous à diffuser ce qui compte pour VOUS

L'ISPP des IRSC souhaite créer un profil de son auditoire et revoir
ses méthodes de communication pour mieux répondre à vos besoins.
Veuillez prendre quelques instants pour répondre à notre court sondage.

Conférence annuelle 2013 de L'Association canadienne de santé
publique. Faire progresser la santé publique : preuves, politiques et
pratiques

Des professionnels, des chercheurs, des responsables des politiques,
des universitaires, des étudiants et des stagiaires en santé publique
du Canada et du monde entier se réuniront à Ottawa, en Ontario, pour
l'édition 2013 de la Conférence annuelle de l'Association canadienne
de santé publique. Ce rassemblement sera pour les délégués l'occasion
d'explorer les nouveaux défis qui attendent la santé publique et le
rôle que peuvent jouer différents types de données probantes dans la
recherche de solutions

Rédaction de demandes de subvention 101 9 juin 2013 de 9 h à 12 h
L'évaluation par les pairs et vous : pour exceller dans la pratique de
l'évaluation de textes 9 juin 2013 de 13h à 15h
Voies de l'équité en santé pour les Autochtones 10 juin 2013 de 10h30 à 12h
Santé publique – Pensée systémique 10 juin 2013 de 10h30 à 12h
Environnements et la santé 10 juin 2013 de 14h00 à 15h30
Centre des congrés d'Ottawa- 9-12 Juin 2013.
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez consulter le site web.


Possibilités de financement, subventions, et prix (organizé par date limite)
Les possibilités de financement de l'ISPP peuvent être retrouvées ici
en sélectionnant l'Institut de la santé publique et des populations du
menu déroulant.
L'Institut Canadien de Recherch Avancées (ICRA)
Avez-vous une idée de question de recherche qui requiert l'attention
de certains des plus brillants esprits du monde – une question qui,
par sa portée ambitieuse et sa grande profondeur, mènera à des
recherches transformatrices? Voilà l'occasion de travailler avec
l'ICRA pour créer un réseau de recherche mondial et
interdisciplinaire, composé d'éminents experts qui se pencheront sur
une question d'importance pour l'humanité et tisseront des liens
essentiels entre la recherche et la société. L'ICRA lance son tout
premier appel de propositions pour cerner de nouvelles idées de
recherche portant sur des questions complexes d'importance pour
l'humanité.
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez consulter le site web.
Date limite pour présenter une lettre d'intention 7 juin 2013.

Le concours pour le financement de nouveaux réseaux a été lancé
Le Secrétariat des Réseaux de centres d'excellence (RCE) a lancé un
concours en vue de financer de nouveaux réseaux par l'entremise du
Programme des réseaux de centres d'excellence. Le Programme des RCE
investit dans la recherche et le talent entrepreneurial du Canada pour
assurer le transfert et l'application des connaissances, créant ainsi
des avantages économiques et sociaux pour les Canadiens. Les réseaux
jouent un rôle important dans la mobilisation de certains des grands
talents de la recherche universitaire du Canada, et dans l'engagement
des partenaires canadiens et étrangers des secteurs privé, public et
sans but lucratif. Ensemble, les chercheurs et leurs partenaires
repoussent les frontières de la connaissance universelle pour élaborer
et mettre en œuvre des solutions à multiples facettes aux problèmes
complexes auxquels le Canada est confronté, ce qui accroît les
retombées de la recherche et de la formation en recherche pour le
Canada.
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez consulter le site web
lDate limite de présentation des demandes : 1er août 2013.

Programme d'appui communautaire (PACI) de l'Institut de la santé
publique et des populations (ISPP)
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez constulter le site web.



Appel d'abrégés / de communications
Fifth International Cancer Control Congress: Call for Abstracts
(anglais seulement)
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez consulter le site web.
Date limite : 14 juin 2013

Population Data British Columbia: Training and Events Updates (anglais
seulement)
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez consulter le site web


Cours, ateliers et webinaires
University College London Summer School on the Social Determinants of
Health (anglais seulement)
Pour plus d'informations, veuillez consulter le site web.
Du 8 au 12 juillet 2013

Santé-Cap GHR CAPS: Offre de bourses de formation pour stagiaires
postdoctoraux africains. Programme interuniversitaire de formation en
recherche en santé mondiale (Santé-Cap)
Le Programme Santé-Cap vise à contribuer au développement national et
international de la recherche en santé mondiale en recrutant et
formant des chercheurs qui œuvreront dans un environnement
interdisciplinaire de haut calibre et dont les travaux contribueront à
l'avancement des connaissances dans leur domaine. Le Programme offre
une plateforme interuniversitaire variée de formation en santé
mondiale comprenant des cours, des séminaires, des formations de
courte durée, ainsi qu'une école d'été annuelle.
Vous devez nous envoyer votre candidature au plus tard le 15 août
2013, en la faisant parvenir par courriel

Avez-vous lu / vu?

Lancement du nouveau site Web de Santé sur le terrain
Analyse critique des modèles de passage des connaissances à la
pratique et de leur portée dans la promotion de l'équité en santé
Concours Conception de Capsules Vidéo

Calendrier d'événements à venir
Veuillez consulter le site web.

Partager vos contributions scientifiques ou votre histoire de succès
Est-ce que votre recherche a résulté dans une invention
révolutionnaire, le développement d'un nouveau produit/programme ou
les changements dans la politique et la pratique ? Nous voulons en
entendre ! Votre histoire peut être présentée sur notre site Web ou
dans l'édition suivante de notre bulletin d'Institut - POP Nouvelles.
S'il vous plaît envoyez vos publications et / ou vos histoires
d'impact à Emma Cohen , Agente en application des connaissances et en
communications, ISPP.

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Latin American Graduate Research Reviews/ Rese=?iso-8859-1?Q?=F1as_de_Investigaci=F3n_de_Posgrado_en_Am=E9rica?= Latina (LAGRR/RIPAL)

We would like to invite you to participate in Latin American Graduate
Research Reviews/ Reseñas de Investigación de Posgrado en América Latina
(LAGRR/RIPAL). LARGG/RIPAL is devoted to promoting a wider awareness of
in-progress and recently completed student research on Latin America in all
humanities and social science disciplines. We provide the opportunity for
students both to introduce their unpublished doctoral dissertations,
Masters theses, and undergraduate theses to a broader audience as well as
to connect with other student researchers who are pursuing related lines of
investigation.



The success of our project requires the participation of others who believe
in the value of this endeavor. According, we ask that you consider
participating in one or more of the following capacities:



1. Adding a brief description of your in-progress research to our
catalog of "In-Progress Research."

2. Serving as a Reviewer of completed dissertations and theses.

3. Submitting your completed dissertation or thesis for review by
one of our Reviewers.



Our reviews are not critical reviews, but rather they are designed to
highlight and call attention to the innovations being made by students,
with the goal of providing free, positive publicity for the scholarship
that they are completing. Reviews summarize the author's primary arguments
and methodology, situate the work in relation to existing scholarship, and
explain the contributions that the work will make to scholarship on Latin
America; as many of the authors who submit their theses/dissertations are
in the process of converting their works in to publications, our reviews
protect the integrity of submitted work by remaining general in their
summaries and not including detail about specific research sources or data.
Our reviewers are faculty and graduate students from throughout the
Americas, Europe, and the South Pacific. They work in a wide range of
disciplines and have a wide range of research specialties, so scholars with
expertise specific to each dissertation/thesis topic conduct all reviews.



In addition to providing reviews of recently completed graduate research,
LAGRR/RIPAL also provides a separate catalog of information on in-progress
graduate research. Although we do not publish reviews of in-progress
research, this "Catalog of In-Progress Research" contains brief
descriptions of in-progress student research. This catalog allows current
graduate students to publicize their in-progress research and to connect
with other graduate students who are undertaking research on similar topics
or in a similar location.



If you are interested in serving as a Reviewer, adding a brief description
of your in-progress research to our catalog of "In-Progress Research",
and/or submitting your dissertation or thesis for review by one of our
reviewers, please click on the following link to compete a brief academic
profile:



https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1DPP9pP584SEq7IHr3_3wUwGpNwYob8682o8LUGakjLI/viewform



Further information about LAGRR/RIPAL, please visit our website at
http://lagrr.wordpress.com/

or our Facebook page at http://www.facebook.com/LAGRRRIPAL. We thank you
for your interest in our project and encourage you to share this
information with any colleagues, peers, and students who might also be
interested in this project.



Sincerely,



Ricardo A. Fagoaga Hernández

Ph.D. Candidate, Latin American History

Universidad de California, San Diego



Jedrek P. Mularski, Ph.D.

Professor of Latin American and World History

Saddleback College



Isabel María Povea Moreno, Dra.

Becaria Posdoctoral

Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México



Te queremos invitar a Latin American Graduate Research Reviews/ Reseñas de
Investigación de Posgrado en América Latina (LAGRR/ RIPAL) que se dedica a
promover el trabajo en progreso y el de reciente conclusión de cualquier
disciplina de las humanidades y ciencias sociales en América Latina.
Nuestro sitio da la oportunidad a estudiantes de licenciatura y posgrado a
presentar sus tesis de licenciatura, maestría y doctorado a una audiencia
amplia en la forma de reseñas, así como relacionarse con otros
estudiantes-investigadores con intereses afines.



El éxito de nuestro proyecto requiere la participación de otras personas
que creen en el valor de esta iniciativa. Por esto, te solicitamos que
consideres participar en una o varias de las siguientes categorías:



1. Aportar una breve descripción de tu investigación en progreso
para nuestro catálogo.

2. Ser un(a) reseñador(a) de tesis de licenciatura, maestría y
doctorado.

3. Enviar tu tesis o disertación terminada para ser reseñada.



Nuestras reseñas no son críticas, si no que están diseñadas para resaltar y
publicitar las innovaciones hechas por los tesistas, con el propósito de
proveer publicidad gratuita y positiva al trabajo que completaron. Las
reseñas resumen los argumentos primarios de los autores y su metodología,
ubican el trabajo con relación a otros estudios hechos y explican las
contribuciones que la tesis hace a América Latina. Como muchos de los
autores que mandan sus tesis/ disertaciones están en proceso de convertir
su trabajo en publicaciones, nuestras reseñas protegen la integridad de los
manuscritos que nos envían ya que hablan en términos generales y no se
incluyen detalles específicos de las fuentes o los datos utilizados.
Nuestros reseñadores son profesores y estudiantes de posgrado de América,
Europa y el Pacífico del sur. Su trabajo abarca un amplio espectro de
disciplinas y especialidades, por este motivo los especialistas en un tema
realizan reseñas específicas.



Además de las reseñas de tesis de reciente conclusión, LAGRR/ RIPAL también
proporciona información de las investigaciones en progreso en un catálogo
distinto. Aunque no publicamos reseñas de tesis en progreso, agregamos
estos trabajos a nuestro catálogo de "Investigación en Progreso" que
contiene una breve descripción de la investigación. Este catálogo permite a
los estudiantes de posgrado publicitar su trabajo y ponerse en contacto con
otros estudiantes que están llevando a cabo investigaciones con temas
similares o se encuentran en la misma ubicación geográfica.



Si estás interesado(a) en ser un(a) reseñador(a), agrega una breve
descripción de tu investigación en progreso a nuestro catálogo y/ o también
mándanos tu tesis para ser reseñada. Por favor, visita el siguiente vínculo
para completar nuestro formato:



https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1DPP9pP584SEq7IHr3_3wUwGpNwYob8682o8LUGakjLI/viewform



Para más información acerca de LAGRR/ RIPAL, por favor visita nuestro blog/
sitio en http://lagrr.wordpress.com/ o nuestra página en facebook
http://www.facebook.com/LAGRRRIPAL. Te damos las gracias por tu interés en
nuestro proyecto y te animamos a que compartas tu información con
cualquiera de tus colegas, estudiantes y amigos que puedan estar
interesados.



Atentamente,



Ricardo A. Fagoaga Hernández

Ph.D. Candidate, Latin American History

Universidad de California, San Diego



Jedrek P. Mularski, Ph.D.

Professor of Latin American and World History

Saddleback College



Isabel María Povea Moreno, Dra.

Becaria Posdoctoral

Instituto de Investigaciones Históricas

Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México

CASCA: Job postings/Offres d'emploi

(English follows)

Les offres d'emploi suivantes viennent d'être ajoutées à notre banque.


-Aboriginal Human Rights - Tier 2 Canada Research Chair
University of Manitoba

-Indigenous Studies - Assistant Professor (Indigenous Arts, Theater and
Performance)
Université de Sudbury

-Études autochtones - Professeur adjoint (Arts, théâtre et interprétation
autochtones)
Université de Sudbury

-Sociology - Lecturer/Assistant Professor (Quantitative and Mixed Methods)
University of Windsor

-Digital Archive Assistant (SEP)
Multicultural History Society of Ontario

-Exhibition Assistant
Vancouver Art Gallery

-Postdoctoral Fellowship - Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious
and Ethnic Diversity

-ANTHROPOLOGY COURSE INSTRUCTOR POSTING
UTSC

-SUMMER ARCHAEOLOGY JOBS FOR SOUTHERN ONTARIO ANTHROPOLOGY STUDENTS
Western Heritage

-Policy Analyst/Writer - Congress of Aboriginal Peoples in Ottawa

-Sessional Lecturers - Positions Available
Lakehead University – Orillia Campus

-Canada Research Chair in Aboriginal Human Rights, Assistant or Associate
Professor
University of Manitoba

-Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Gender & Work
York University

-Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Employment Standards Enforcement York
University


Consultez-les ou voyez toute la liste en visitant notre site Web:

www.cas-sca.ca

Merci

**********

The following job postings have just been added to our job page:


-Aboriginal Human Rights - Tier 2 Canada Research Chair
University of Manitoba

-Indigenous Studies - Assistant Professor (Indigenous Arts, Theater and
Performance)
Université de Sudbury

-Études autochtones - Professeur adjoint (Arts, théâtre et interprétation
autochtones)
Université de Sudbury

-Sociology - Lecturer/Assistant Professor (Quantitative and Mixed Methods)
University of Windsor

-Digital Archive Assistant (SEP)
Multicultural History Society of Ontario

-Exhibition Assistant
Vancouver Art Gallery

-Postdoctoral Fellowship - Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious
and Ethnic Diversity

-ANTHROPOLOGY COURSE INSTRUCTOR POSTING
UTSC

-SUMMER ARCHAEOLOGY JOBS FOR SOUTHERN ONTARIO ANTHROPOLOGY STUDENTS
Western Heritage

-Policy Analyst/Writer - Congress of Aboriginal Peoples in Ottawa

-Sessional Lecturers - Positions Available
Lakehead University – Orillia Campus

-Canada Research Chair in Aboriginal Human Rights, Assistant or Associate
Professor
University of Manitoba

-Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Gender & Work
York University

-Postdoctoral Research Fellowship in Employment Standards Enforcement York
University


See them and others on our website:

www.cas-sca.ca

Thank you

CFP: EIGHTH SOAS CONFERENCE ON THE QUR'AN

CALLS FOR PAPERS


'The Qur'an: Text, Society And Culture' Conference

Thursday 7 – Saturday 9 November 2013

SOAS, University of London

Convenors: Prof. M.A.S. Abdel Haleem and Dr Helen Blatherwick

Deadline for abstracts: 1 June 2013

Proposals are invited for the Eighth SOAS Conference on the Qur'an, to be
held
from Thursday 7 to Saturday 9 November 2013. The conference series seeks to
provide a forum for investigating the basic question: how is the Qur'anic
text
read and interpreted? Our objective is to encompass a global vision of
current
research trends, and to stimulate discussion, debate and research on all
aspects of the Qur'anic text and its interpretation and translation.

While the conference will remain committed to the textual study of the Qur'an
and the religious, intellectual and artistic activity that developed
around it
and drew on it, contributions on all topics relevant to Qur'anic studies are
welcomed and attention will also be given to literary, cultural,
politico-sociological and anthropological studies relating to the Qur'an. The
final conference programme will take account of the range of proposals
actually
accepted.

Selected papers will be published as articles in the Journal of Qur'anic
Studies, subject to standard outside refereeing. Speakers are expected to
give
priority to JQS when publishing these articles.

Submission of Abstracts:

The deadline for abstracts is 1 June 2013. Abstracts of up to 400 words and a
short bio (of up to 200 words) should be submitted in Word format by email
attachment to quran.conference@soas.ac.uk. The primary conference language is
English, but papers may be presented in English or Arabic. All applicants
will
be notified of the status of their proposals in July.

Presented papers should be 25 minutes long, and will be followed by 5 minutes
for questions per paper.

Further Information:

It is Centre of Islamic Studies policy to reimburse featured speakers for
their
standard travel expenses, hotel accommodation and board. We do, however,
encourage speakers to try to obtain some funding from their home universities
or other sources wherever possible.

If you would like further information on the conference series, please visit
the conference website at www.soas.ac.uk/cisconference
<http://www.soas.ac.uk/islamicstudies/conferences/quran2011/> . This will
be updated with the conference programme from September 2013, on an
ongoing basis.


For general enquiries, please contact the conference administrator at
conference@how-foundation.org . For academic enquiries contact Helen
Blatherwick at <hb20@soas.ac.uk>.

No registration is required for this conference and all are welcome to
attend.

Venue: Brunei Gallery, SOAS, University of London, Russell Square, Thornhaugh
Street, London WC1H 0XG


Dr Helen Blatherwick
Near and Middle East Department
SOAS, University of London

CFP - Association of Social Anthropology of Aotearoa/New Zealand Annual Conference, 2013


Association of Social Anthropology of Aotearoa/New Zealand Annual Conference 2013, Whaingaroa/Raglan New Zealand

Hosted by the Anthropology Programme, University of Waikato, 1-3 December 2013

 Ethnoscapes, Culturescapes: Anthropologies for the Present (see below)

We encourage all those who wish to propose a session addressing the theme to submit a 200 word abstract by July 15th, 2013.

Paper abstracts of approximately 150 words should be submitted by September 1st 2013.

Please address all correspondence to Fiona McCormack & Tom Ryanasaanzraglan2013@gmail.com

Information concerning accommodation, registration, keynote speaker & the conference dinner will be available soon

Ethnoscapes, Culturescapes: Anthropologies for the Present

The term ‘ethnoscape’ was first used by Arjun Appadurai in his 1990 essay ‘Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy’. Rejecting existing models of the global cultural economy, he argued that it should be understood as a complex, overlapping order featuring “fundamental disjunctures between economy, culture, and politics which we have barely begun to theorize”.  The framework he proposed for exploring these disjunctures was premised on the relationships between five primary dimensions: ethnoscapes, mediascapes, technoscapes, financescapes, and ideoscapes.

His use of the suffix ‘scape’ indicated that these are not “objectively given relations that look the same from every angle of vision”, but rather deeply perspectival constructs, ‘imagined worlds’ inflected by the historical, linguistic, and political situatedness of different sorts of actors. The latter might range from nation states, multinational corporations, diasporic communities, and subnational groupings, to villages, neighbourhoods, families, and individuals.

Especially in anthropology, the most influential of Appadurai’s ‘scapes’ has been ‘ethnoscape’. He defined this as “the landscape of persons who constitute the shifting world in which we live: tourists, immigrants, refugees, exiles, guestworkers, and other moving groups and persons [who] constitute an essential feature of the world, and appear to affect the politics of and between nations to a hitherto unprecedented degree”.

This does not, he said, negate the significance of “relatively stable communities and networks” based on kinship, birth, residence, filiation, friendship, work, leisure”, etc. But “the warp of these stabilities is everywhere shot through with the woof of human motion, as more persons and groups deal with the realities of having to move, or the fantasies of wanting to move”.

Appadurai did not himself put a label on these “relatively stable communities and networks”. For our purposes we will call them ‘culturescapes’. In a sense, with the idea of ‘culturescapes’ we return to twenty-first century versions of the more ‘traditional’ sites of ethnography â€" neighbourhoods, communities, islands, valleys, workplaces, organisations, and so on â€" though with the added dimension of their being imbued with “the woof of human motion”.

Participants in the ASAANZ-2013 conference are encouraged particularly to pursue, ethnographically and/or theoretically, the concept of a global cultural economy, with reference to the shifting, imagined worlds characteristic of ethnoscapes and/or the relative social stabilities that typify culturescapes. Contributions that fall beyond these parameters also are very welcome.



-- 
Dr Fiona McCormack
Anthropology Programme
School of Social Sciences
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
The University of Waikato
Private Bag 3105
Hamilton
New Zealand



Association of Social Anthropology of Aotearoa/New Zealand Annual
Conference 2013,
Whaingaroa/Raglan New Zealand
Hosted by the Anthropology Programme, University of Waikato, 1-3 December
2013

Ethnoscapes, Culturescapes: Anthropologies for the Present (see below)

We encourage all those who wish to propose a session addressing the theme
to submit
a 200 word abstract by July 15th, 2013.

Paper abstracts of approximately 150 words should be submitted by
September 1st 2013.

Please address all correspondence to Fiona McCormack & Tom
Ryanasaanzraglan2013@gmail.com

Information concerning accommodation, registration, keynote speaker & the
conference
dinner will be available soon


Ethnoscapes, Culturescapes: Anthropologies for the Present

The term 'ethnoscape' was first used by Arjun Appadurai in his 1990 essay
'Disjuncture and Difference in the Global Cultural Economy'. Rejecting
existing
models of the global cultural economy, he argued that it should be
understood as a
complex, overlapping order featuring "fundamental disjunctures between
economy,
culture, and politics which we have barely begun to theorize". The
framework he
proposed for exploring these disjunctures was premised on the
relationships between
five primary dimensions: ethnoscapes, mediascapes, technoscapes,
financescapes, and
ideoscapes.

His use of the suffix 'scape' indicated that these are not "objectively given
relations that look the same from every angle of vision", but rather deeply
perspectival constructs, 'imagined worlds' inflected by the historical,
linguistic,
and political situatedness of different sorts of actors. The latter might
range from
nation states, multinational corporations, diasporic communities, and
subnational
groupings, to villages, neighbourhoods, families, and individuals.

Especially in anthropology, the most influential of Appadurai's 'scapes'
has been
'ethnoscape'. He defined this as "the landscape of persons who constitute the
shifting world in which we live: tourists, immigrants, refugees, exiles,
guestworkers, and other moving groups and persons [who] constitute an
essential
feature of the world, and appear to affect the politics of and between
nations to a
hitherto unprecedented degree".

This does not, he said, negate the significance of "relatively stable
communities
and networks" based on kinship, birth, residence, filiation, friendship,
work,
leisure", etc. But "the warp of these stabilities is everywhere shot
through with
the woof of human motion, as more persons and groups deal with the
realities of
having to move, or the fantasies of wanting to move".

Appadurai did not himself put a label on these "relatively stable
communities and
networks". For our purposes we will call them 'culturescapes'. In a sense,
with the
idea of 'culturescapes' we return to twenty-first century versions of the
more
'traditional' sites of ethnography – neighbourhoods, communities, islands,
valleys,
workplaces, organisations, and so on – though with the added dimension of
their
being imbued with "the woof of human motion".

Participants in the ASAANZ-2013 conference are encouraged particularly to
pursue,
ethnographically and/or theoretically, the concept of a global cultural
economy,
with reference to the shifting, imagined worlds characteristic of
ethnoscapes and/or
the relative social stabilities that typify culturescapes. Contributions
that fall
beyond these parameters also are very welcome.



--
Dr Fiona McCormack
Anthropology Programme
School of Social Sciences
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
The University of Waikato
Private Bag 3105
Hamilton
New Zealand
07 856 2889 ext: 8271

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Women Deliver 2013 Conference

Dear colleagues,

Today the 3-day Women Deliver 2013 Conference commences in Malaysia. Helen
Clark will be a key note speaker as well as Ms. Brundtland who recently
said "It is time to stop discrimination against girls & women" and "Women
are essential for Sustainable Development". Please find the link to Ms.
Brundtland's article for easy access (http://bit.ly/112NuxN).

The conference link is http://bit.ly/M1TEq8 and you can follow the live
stream here: http://on.undp.org/llcva. You can follow the messaging from
the conference, and contribute yourself, through social media such as
through twitter with the hash tag #WD2013.

Best regards,

Raymond

Raymond Brandes
Programme Specialist



Partners for Prevention: Violence is Preventable
UNDP, UNFPA, UN Women & UNV Asia-Pacific Regional Joint Programme for
Gender-based Violence Prevention
3rd Floor, UN Service Building
Rajadamnern Nok Avenue
Bangkok 10200 Thailand
Tel: +66 2 304 9100 extension 2782 / Mob: +66 85 352 1680
www.partners4prevention.org

Call for papers: Food sovereignty -- a critical dialogue, Yale, 12 - 13 September

Call for Abstracts/Papers - Food Sovereignty: A Critical Dialogue
September 14–15, 2013
Yale University

Deadline: June 15, 2013


We are inviting abstracts/papers around the broad topic of "food
sovereignty" for the upcoming conference Food Sovereignty: A Critical
Dialogue. We understand the concept broadly as the right of peoples to
democratically control or determine the shape of their food system, and
to produce sufficient and healthy food in culturally appropriate and
ecologically sustainable ways in and near their territory. As such it
spans issues like food politics, agroecology, land reform, bio-fuels,
genetically modified organisms (GMOs), the patenting of life forms, labor
migration, the feeding of volatile cities, urban gardening, ecological
sustainability, and subsistence rights, among others. We are interested in
varied papers including theoretical, empirical, methodological,
state-of-the-art review, and commentary papers by established or early
career researchers. We are especially interested in papers that are
skeptical and/or critical of the issue, which raise important and
difficult questions. Embracing a plenary of views, the conference aims to
provide a platform for a critical but constructive dialogue.

Interested participants should submit a CV and an abstract with project
title of no more than 500 words to the following email address:

food.sovereignty2013@gmail.com

by June 15th, 2013. If you have a draft paper, we encourage you to
submit the full paper instead. Decisions will be rendered by July 1st. Some
papers presented at the conference will be considered for publication in the
Journal of Peasant Studies (JPS).

Unfortunately, the modest funds available for the conference are not
able to provide ALL participants with travel and accommodation support.
Breakfast and lunch, however, will be provided.

Please feel free to contact us at the above email address with any
questions.
Organizing Committee:

Saturnino ("Jun") M. Borras Jr., Todd Holmes, James C. Scott, and
Kalyanakrishnan ("Shivi") Sivaramakrishnan
Conference Secretariat:

Todd Holmes, Zoe VanGelder, and Andrés Vargas Castillo



Professor A Haroon Akram-Lodhi
Chair of the Department of International Development Studies
Trent University
Peterborough, Canada
Contact details: https://sites.google.com/site/aharoonakramlodhi/
Twitter: @AHAkramLodhi

WCAA associations news to share

WCAA SISTER ASSOCIATION NEWS**

**First issue of new WCAA journal, Déjà Lu online
*This journal consists of reprints of articles (as chosen by their
editors) from journals published by WCAA member associations and aims at
pluralizing the dissemination of anthropological knowledge on a global
level. We look forward to Déjà Lu becoming bigger in future issues; for
now, we are proud to finally have a common platform, whereby we can all
easily read anthropologies from around the world in a single forum.
See: http://www.wcaanet.org/dejalu

Please disseminate this news on your websites and to your e-lists; and
do get in touch with us if you have any comments or queries!
Gustavo Lins Ribeiro <gustavor@unb.br> and Gordon Mathews
<cmgordon@cuhk.edu.hk>
Editors, Déjà Lu

---
*
****Anthropology Southern Africa Annual Conference
*MUTUALITY AND ITS LIMITS
Hosted by the Wits Anthropology Department
6-8 September 2013
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa

Preliminary call for papers and panels:
How do people take others into account? What do we find interesting in
other lives, and how do they become valuable, trivial, threatening,
obscure or puzzling to us? How do our capacities for recognizing other
lives depend on the work of particular kinds of social forms, relations,
mediations and representations? A renewed interest in these elementary
questions about mutuality has produced a wealth of new thinking in the
humanities and human sciences in recent years. Questions about the
conditions and the limits of mutuality are also of major importance for
our understanding of pressing issues to do with inequality, solidarity,
hospitality and violence.

For this year's ASnA Conference, to be hosted by Wits Anthropology on
6-8 September 2013 in Johannesburg, we invite proposals for papers and
panels broadly addressing the theme of 'mutuality and its limits'.
Within this rubric, we especially encourage participants to consider the
ways in which new work in African anthropology is reorienting and
revitalizing the discipline.

Proposals should include name, affiliation, paper/panel title and an
abstract of no more than 250 words. For panel proposals, please include
a list of prospective participants if these have already been
identified. Proposals should be sent to asnaconference2013@gmail.com.
Deadline:1 June 2013.
*
---

**ASAA/NZ conferences and journal
*This year's conference will be hosted by University of Waikato, at
Raglan, a very picturesque little town on the wild west coast, Dec 1-3,
with a theme of ""Ethnoscapes, Culturescapes: Anthropologies for the
present"." Contact Fiona McCormack: fio@waikato.ac.nz
Next years (2014) conference will be a combined one, with AAS
(Australia), hosted by University of Otago and will be held at (even
more picturesque) Queenstown, among the mountains in the South Island.
Dates and other details will be announced in due course.
Our journal (of anthropology and cultural studies) SITES, continues to
grow and flourish. Contributions are invited, from any discipline, but
with a regional scope of "the Pacific" (broadly defined).
http://sites.otago.ac.nz/index.php/Sites/index
See:http://asaanz.science.org.nz/index.html

---

***CGA/Argentina**journal CFP
*The annual call for papers for the 2013 issues of our journal,
PUBLICAR, is currently open. PUBLICAR welcomes research papers,
interviews and reviews of books covering theoretical, methodological and
issues of current interest in anthropology and the rest of the social
sciences. PUBLICAR is peer-reviewed and mainly open to associates and
members of the CGA, but will review submissions from international
specialists or researchers in the social sciences with long-term
experience in their fields.
Editorial guidelines can be found at:
http://ppct.caicyt.gov.ar/index.php/publicar/about/submissions#authorGuidelines
Deadline for submissions: June 3 2013.

---

***GAA/Germany 2013 conference**
*Mainz from October, 2nd to 5th
The conference will focus on the subject "Locations: anthropology in the
academy, the workplace, and the public sphere".
See: http://tagung2013.dgv-net.de/english_2013.html

---

***AAA has launched a new website:**This Is Anthropology
<At%20the%202012%20Annual%20Meeting%20in%20San%20Francisco,%20AAA%20had%20the%20pleasure%20of%20announcing%20the%20launch%20of%20a%20new%20website%20called%20This%20Is%20Anthropology%20%3chttp:/www.thisisanthropology.com/index.cfm%3e.%20This%20Is%20Anthropology%20was%20created%20for%20students,%20parents%20and%20the%20general%20public%20to%20learn%20more%20about%20what%20anthropology%20is%20and%20what%20anthropologists%20do%20in%20simple,%20accessible%20language.%20%20The%20site%20allows%20anthropologists%20from%20around%20the%20world%20to%20share%20a%20photo%20and%20a%20brief%20%22blurb%22%20about%20their%20work%20along%20with%20their%20contact%20information.%20Visitors%20to%20the%20site%20can%20then%20enter%20a%20location%20anywhere%20in%20the%20world%20and%20find%20anthropologists%20who%20are%20working%20in%20that%20area.>**
*This Is Anthropology was created for students, parents and the general
public to learn more about what anthropology is and what anthropologists
do in simple, accessible language. The site allows anthropologists from
around the world to share a photo and a brief "blurb" about their work
along with their contact information. Visitors to the site can then
enter a location anywhere in the world and find anthropologists who are
working in that area.

Though still at the beta stage of development, the site currently
includes an overview of the discipline of anthropology
<http://www.thisisanthropology.com/about-anthropology>, the skills
<http://www.thisisanthropology.com/anthropological-skills> and careers
<http://www.thisisanthropology.com/anthropological-careers> of
anthropologists, advice on how to become an anthropologist
<http://www.thisisanthropology.com/become-an-anthropologist>, and an
interactive map <http://www.thisisanthropology.com/map.cfm> displaying
anthropology projects in different parts of the world. Visitors to the
website will learn about the kinds of jobs anthropologists have, the
skill sets we employ, the kinds of research questions we ask, and how
anthropologists around the globe are attempting to better understand
what it means to be human. We hope this visual display of the work of
many and varied anthropologists will convey to visitors the critical
thinking, productive approaches to diversity, effective written and oral
communication, and technical skills that are central to the work of
anthropologists.

We need the profiles of as many anthropologists as possible to
demonstrate the breadth and importance of our work!

Before promoting the site to a broader audience, we need our members to
add their profile to the map. It's quick and easy to add your
information. You can add photos and links, flag your research site on
the map, and share information about your research. Simply visit this
link: http://www.thisisanthropology.com/index.cfm to share your work
with the world!

---

*****Irish Journal of Anthropology is putting out an open call for
submissions.**
*The Irish Journal of Anthropology (IJA) is a biannual publication of
the Anthropological Association of Ireland (AAI). The AAI and IJA seek
to promote the discipline of Anthropology throughout the island of
Ireland, both North and South, by providing coverage of anthropological
research and issues regarding Ireland and anthropological discipline in
general. It endeavours to be of interest not only to anthropologists and
those engaged in academia but to those interested and engaged in various
related fields, including but not limited to Archaeology, Cultural
Studies, Development Studies, Ethnology and Folk Studies, Gaeilge, Irish
Studies, and Sociology.

Submissions are welcomed from any and all contributors engaged in or
studying an anthropologically related topic, either from those working
in Ireland or those engaged in a subject related to Ireland.
See: http://www.anthropologyireland.org/journal/notes-for-contributers/

---

***Tunisian Association of Anthropology organizes
*The Fourth International Symposium of Biological and Cultural Anthropology
18-20 December 2013 , Tunisia
The Arabic language and its peoples
*
*See: http://www.ata.org.tn/

---

***ASA14: Edinburgh, **19-22 June 2014**
*Info will go up on the ASA website about this shortly. The Call for
Panels will go out at the end of the summer.
But for now, see:
https://www.san.ed.ac.uk/scottish_training_in_anthropological_research_star/2014_asa_decennial_congress

---

***2013 RAI Postgraduate conference, University of Aberdeen, October 28-29**
***Ideas in movement: Addressing tensions in anthropology
Extended deadline CFP: May 31

Plenary speakers: Tim Ingold and Rane Willerslev.

The Scottish Training in Anthropological Research (STAR) is proud to
announce the 2013 RAI Postgraduate conference at the University of
Aberdeen. Established in 2006, STAR fosters collaborations between
social anthropology staff and research students from the Universities of
Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow and St Andrews.

To propose a paper, see: http://raipgconference2013.com/

---

***13th RAI Film festival, 13th-16th June, Edinburgh**
*The festival is jointly hosted by the National Museums of Scotland and
STAR (Scottish Training in Anthropological Research, a collaboration
between the Universities of Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow and St.
Andrews) and co-sponsored by the Center for Visual Anthropology,
University of Southern California.

An inspiring and international programme of documentaries from around
the world; many filmmakers have already confirmed their attendance!

Read more and register: http://www.raifilmfest.org.uk

---

***CFP extended deadline 1 July 2013 **
*Teaching Amidst Change conference, 5-6 September 2013, 15 Norham
Gardens, Department of Education, University of Oxford

This two-day conference on teaching and learning anthropology will
explore how we employ anthropological approaches, insights and debates
within conversations about current events. We invite also ethnographic
reflections on the role that 'change' may play within the classroom, the
university, in the field and within the discipline. Are
transformations, or 'crises', teachable in anthropology? What are their
implications for academic research, teaching and learning across a
pan-European anthropological community? What is the role for
anthropological teaching and learning in articulating or engaging with
'change'?

Keynote speakers: Professor Susana Narotzky (University of Barcelona)
and Professor Sue Wright (Aarhus University)

Please submit abstracts between 400-500 words by 1 July 2013 to:
editorsteachinganthropology@gmail.com

See: http://www.easaonline.org/networks/teaching/events.shtml#tac

Saturday, May 25, 2013

UN Professional Placements Program

United Nations Professional Placements (UNPP) International Programmer -
Current Opportunities


http://www.unac.org/en/projects/interns/locations/currentlist.asp

Friday, May 24, 2013

Job Listings - Canadian Museums Association

Please see the following link for several job opportunities posted through
the Canadian Museums Association:

http://www.pro.rcip-chin.gc.ca/emplois-jobs/voir-view/lister-list-eng.app?p_nav_from=1&p_nav_perpage=10

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Panel - Harper Gov't Review of Canadian History

CASCA members attending the Congress of the Federation of Humanities and
Social Sciences in Victoria may be interested in the following Canadian
Historical Association Sponsored Panel:

Monday, June 5, 2013

8:00&#8208;9:30 pm / 20h00&#8208;21h30 &#8208;&#8208; Legacy Art Gallery,
630 Yates St.

Public Forum on the Harper Government Review of Canadian History / Forum
public sur l'e&#769;tude de l'histoire canadienne par le gouvernement
Harper

Everyone welcome / Tous sont les bienvenus

CFP: Archaeological Science and the Ancient Mediterranean Environment - November 8-9, 2013, Graduate Conference, University of Toronto

Archaeological Science and the Ancient Mediterranean Environment
November 8-9, 2013 Graduate Conference, University of Toronto
Deadline: September 2, 2013

Further info:
http://www.anthropology.utoronto.ca/news-amp-events/calls-for-papers-1/Archaeological%20Science%20Conference%20Call%20Poster%20May%2014.pdf

GRADUATE STUDENT PAPER PRIZE IN THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF CAM/IM

GRADUATE STUDENT PAPER PRIZE IN THE ANTHROPOLOGY OF CAM/IM

The Complementary and Alternative Medicine (CAM) and Integrative Medicine
(IM) special interest group of the Society for Medical Anthropology
requests submissions for a new Graduate Student Paper Prize in the
Anthropology of CAM or IM. The group was organized in 2006 to encourage
the anthropological study of CAM and IM as emergent socio-medical
phenomena having global ramifications in the 21st century. Our members
recognize CAM/IM as a contemporary example of medical pluralism,
influenced by processes of globalization and hybridization, scientization
and commodification.

Qualifying submissions will be judged by a committee of CAM/IM SIG members.
The author of the winning paper will receive a cash award of $100 and her
or his name will be announced in Anthropology News and at the Society for
Medical Anthropology business meeting at the American Anthropological
Association Annual Meeting in November. Submissions from all
anthropological sub-disciplines are encouraged.

QUALIFYING CRITERIA
* Primary or first author must be a graduate student at time of submission
* Preferably based on original fieldwork and data, but can be theoretical
* Must have been written in the past 24 months
* May be unpublished or submitted for publication at the time of
submission
* Maximum of 8,000 words, not including references.

JUDGEMENT CRITERIA
* Link to the CAM/IM SIG statement of purpose (above)
* Originality of fieldwork and data
* Richness of substantive or evidentiary materials
* Clarity of anthropological methods
* Effective use of theory and/or data
* Organization, quality of writing, and coherence of argument

SUBMISSION PROCESS
* Please do not include your name or any identifying information in the
paper itself
* Provide a separate cover sheet that includes your name, mailing
address, email address, and school affiliation
* Papers must be double-spaced and in PDF format (please include page
numbers)
* References should be formatted in the American Anthropologist style
* Please submit an electronic copy to Sonya
Pritzker(spritzker@mednet.ucla.edu)
* Submissions must be received by 5:00PM EST, July 1, 2013 for full
consideration

Questions may be directed to Sonya Pritzker at the above email address. We
look forward to your submissions!

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Upcoming Talk, Toronto - Thomas King, The Inconvenient Indian

The Inconvenient Indian

Thomas King

7:00pm
Tuesday, June 4, 2013

North York Central Library - Auditorium
5120 Yonge Street, North York/Toronto

Activist, humorist, novelist and critic Thomas King presents North America
with a cutting restatement of history from the point of view of the First
Nations of 'Turtle Island'. The indictments are numerous and outlined in
King's darkly humorous style: King cuts deep ? right to the bone ? but he
does it with his usual aplomb and wit. Join Thomas King for a kick-off of
our Aboriginal Celebration.

For more information and/or to register please call 416-395-5639.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Tier 2 CRC in Aboriginal and Human Rights Advertisement

Tier 2 CRC in Aboriginal and Human Rights

http://umanitoba.ca/cgi-bin/human_resources/jobs/view.pl?posting_id=90660

State of the Pacific Conference - Program available

Hedley Bull Centre (130),
Garran Road, Canberra
ANU
Date
Tuesday, 25 June, 2013 (All day) to Wednesday, 26 June, 2013 (All day)

The State, Society and Governance in Melanesia (SSGM) Program will be
hosting the inaugural State of the Pacific conference on 25-26 June 2013.
The conference aims to bring together academics, parliamentarians, policy
makers, business leaders, civil society representatives and the media to
share and discuss research and policy relevant issues on and about the
Pacific region.

The State, Society and Governance in Melanesia Program's inaugural State
of the Pacific Conference is shaping up to what looks to be a full and two
days.

Day one will feature parallel thematic sessions on the State of Democracy,
Land, and Issues for Small Island States.

Day two will feature a morning of sessions on new directions, new ideas
and new initiatives in research in and on the Pacific. In the afternoon, a
cross section of people from academia, civil society, government, the
policy community, and from the media, will be invited to discuss the
themes and issues raised on day one of the conference.

We are pleased to announce a draft program is now available at the
conference event page.

We are also pleased to announce that the State of the Pacific Conference
will be held in conjunction with Development Policy Centre's Pacific
Update & Papua New Guinea Update, which is being held at the same venue on
27 and 28 June.

To keep up to date with the State of the Pacific Conference you can 'like'
the conference Facebook page.

Reply-To: Richard Eves <richard.eves@ANU.EDU.AU>

Friday, May 17, 2013

2013 RUDOLF VIRCHOW AWARDS

2013 RUDOLF VIRCHOW AWARDS

Rudolf Virchow, a 19th century German physician, was a key founder of
social medicine. His contributions centered on his recognition that
multiple intersecting factors - social, political, and economic - produce
disease and illness. He argued that the circumstances and deprivations of
poverty increase people's susceptibility to disease and result in reduced
life expectancy and quality of life. He eloquently articulated the limits
of medicine in the absence of material security, a sentiment which informed
his view that nation-states play an important role in ensuring health
security for a citizenry. Virchow viewed advocacy as an essential part of
health praxis, and, in keeping with this legacy, the Critical Anthropology
for Global Health Caucus honors Virchow's work with three awards.

The annual Rudolf Virchow Awards are given by the Critical Anthropology for
Global Health Caucus, a special interest group of the Society for Medical
Anthropology. The Professional Award honors a recent published article, and
the Graduate and Undergraduate Student Awards honor recent student papers
that have not yet benefited from editorial review. Winning submissions
combine a critical anthropology focus with rich ethnographic data, and best
reflect, extend, and/or advance critical perspectives in medical
anthropology.

Submissions
The submission deadline for the 2013 Rudolf Virchow Awards is July 31, 2013.

Awards are made in the following categories: 1) Professional,2) Graduate
Student and 3) Undergraduate Student (see below). We encourage you to
submit your own work and/or to nominate papers of your students or articles
of colleagues.

If you wish to submit a paper for consideration, please e-mail the paper
and a cover letter of introduction to the 2011 Virchow Awards Chair, Heide
Castañeda, Department of Anthropology, University of South Florida, at
hcastaneda@usf.edu<mailto:hcastaneda@usf.edu> by July 31, 2013. Hard copies
are no longer accepted. Confirmation of receipt will be sent. To ensure a
prompt and fair review, papers will not be accepted after the July 31, 2013
11:59 pm PST deadline.

Professional Award Category
The professional award will be awarded for an article or chapter published
during 2012 in a peer-reviewed journal (print or online) or peer-reviewed
edited volume. Articles may be singly- or co-authored. Technical reports
and other contracted works are not considered for this award. Professional
articles must be submitted electronically in Adobe PDF format as they
appeared in print.

Graduate Award Category
The graduate student award will be awarded for a paper that was written in
2012 or 2013 and that has not yet been subjected to editorial review. Papers
that have been submitted to a journal or edited volume, but that have not
yet benefited from review may be included in this category. Theses and
dissertations will not be accepted. However, a summary no longer than 30
pages double-spaced (inclusive of references) of a thesis or a dissertation
that can stand on it own, or a chapter that has been revised to stand on its
own will be considered for this award. Papers from students who have
graduated are still accepted in this category as long as the paper was
written in 2012 or 2013. Graduate student papers must be submitted in Adobe
PDF or Word format with a title-only first page. File sizes must be less
than 2MB. The document must exclude the author's name, author's advisor, and
university affiliation throughout. The cover letter should include this
information. Only papers, not interactive media, will be considered for
this award.

Undergraduate Award Category
The undergraduate student award will be awarded for a paper written in 2012
or 2013 while the student was still an undergraduate. Honors theses are not
accepted. However, a shortened version no longer than 30 pages double-spaced
(inclusive of references) of the thesis or a chapter from the thesis that
has been revised to stand on its own will be considered for this award.
Undergraduate student papers must be submitted in Adobe PDF or Word format
with a title-only first page. File sizes must be less than 2MB. The
document must exclude the author's name, author's advisor, and university
affiliation throughout. The cover letter should include this information.
Only papers, not interactive media, will be considered for this award.

MA SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITY – “EUGENICS TO NEWGENICS IN ALBERTA: HISTORICAL CONTINUITIES AND DIFFERENCES

MA SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITY – "EUGENICS TO NEWGENICS IN ALBERTA:
HISTORICAL CONTINUITIES AND DIFFERENCES

Dr. Claudia Malacrida, at The University of Lethbridge invites applications
for up to 2 MA positions/scholarships.

These positions are available from January 1 2014 or September 1 2014 for
two years (subject to satisfactory progress reviews after 12 months).
The Eugenics to Newgenics project is funded by the Social Sciences and
Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC). Research on the project will
be conducted in four broad, multi-faceted domains:

* Archival collection and discourse analysis of historical, eugenic
(broadly defined) records

* Oral histories with survivors of Alberta's Sexual Sterilization Act
(1928-1972) and Alberta's eugenic period (again, broadly defined in terms
of passive and active forms)

* Collection and analysis of current professional and lay discourses
relating to disability, difference, reproduction, sexuality and family
status

* Interviews with women with disabilities in the current context
concerning reproductive choice and access, sexualities, and interactions
with child protection services and other helping professionals

Qualifications and requirements:
By the time of taking up the award, candidates must hold a Bachelor's
degree (or equivalent), with a minimum 3.3 Grade Point Average in the
fields of Sociology, Anthropology, Disability Studies, Psychology, Women
and Gender Studies or Political Science. Qualified graduates of related
subjects with a strong Social Science background are also encouraged to
apply. Successful applicants will be required to take up their residence in
Lethbridge, a small city on the Prairies in Canada. Canadian Citizenship is
not a requirement.

For information about the university: www.uleth.ca<http://www.uleth.ca>
For information about Dr. Malacrida:
http://directory.uleth.ca/users/claudia.malacrida?no_headers=1

http://uleth.academia.edu/claudiamalacrida

Remuneration for the MA positions is based on a combination of funding from
the School of Graduate Studies with a stipend from the SSHRC grant. There is
a teaching assistantship obligation of three hours per week during the
teaching semesters.

Interested applicants should forward a working transcript, CV/resume and
letter of interest to: claudia.malacrida@uelth.ca

CFHSS: Communiqu=?iso-8859-1?Q?=E9:_May_2013/FDSH:_Communiqu=E9?= : mai 2013

la version française

http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs190/1109470830784/archive/1113425179652.html


the English version

http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs190/1109470830784/archive/1113424958115.html

Thursday, May 16, 2013

Troubling Violence, Troubling Girlhood: Public Lecture: 22 May, Concordia University, H-429

Subject: Re: Public Lecture: 22 May, H-429

Lena Palacios' talk will be at 12:30pm, on Wednesday, 22 May, in Hall- 429,
Concordia University.

22 May, H-429

Public Lecture: Lena Palacios
"Troubling Violence, Troubling Girlhood: What does it mean to be a "girl"
in a "girl-led collective" organizing against sexual and state violence?"


In conjunction with the course "Feminism, Girls and Girlhoods"

Concordia University, H- 429 (Hall building)

22 May 2013

Abstract: This presentation highlights how the organizing of racialized,
disabled, queer, and gender non-conforming girls who represent the
communities most impacted by interlocking forms of interpersonal (namely
sexual violence) and state violence are at the forefront of developing
transformative justice models.
Negotiating criminal punishment systems, schools, media, activist
formations, neighborhoods, groups of friends, and families, girl-led
organizations build models for dealing with harm that do not rely on
exile, expulsion, or caging, but instead examine the root causes of harm
and seek to transform both victim and perpetuator. Beyond highlighting
these youth-driven collectives' transformative justice models, I focus on
how girls are trained—via a potent mixture of informal education, action
research, and media justice—to become "radical bridge builders"
who engage in intersectionality and intermovement praxis. After
identifying how racist, classist, patriarchal, and ableist frameworks
undergird institutions, many young women "learn in social action" how to
strategically maneuver between a multiplicity of social movements in order
to organize against sexual and state violence.

By centering these case studies of anti-violence and abolitionist activism
that contests colonial state control and surveillance undertaken by girls
and young women, I am ultimately working to problematize the very notion
of "girl" and "girlhood" as a colonial legacy privileging white,
upper-/middle-class, heterosexual, able girl bodies via Eurowestern
theories of normative child development that were and continue to be
violently imposed onto racialized, Indigenous and other minoritized girls.
I am to discuss resistance to the girl and girl-child category alongside
claims to girlhood for political projects (both girl-led and academic-led
initiatives). When do girls and young women resist "girlhood" and why?
When is it claimed and why? I ultimately argue that consideration of these
questions has everything to do with race, class, ability, sexuality, and
settler society standpoints.

Lastly, I will end this presentation with a short video essay about my own
"girlhood" entitled "Shadow Boxing: A Chicana's Journey from Vigilante
Violence to Transformative Justice". In it, I chart my journey from
wanting revenge against an individual—starting when I was a little girl—to
organizing collectively against interlocking forms of institutional
violence—starting as a young woman recently released from juvenile lock-up
in 1990s California. I speak from multiple intersections as a queer mixed
race Chicana from an urban, working-class background who is a survivor of
sexual violence, an anti-violence activist, and a prison abolitionist.

Lena Palacios is a Joint PhD Candidate in Educational Studies and
Communication Studies (Graduate Option in Gender and Women's Studies),
Department of Integrated Studies in Education & Art History Communication
Studies, McGill University, Montreal, QC.

Bio: I am a queer Chicana originally from San Francisco who is currently a
PhD candidate in Education and Communication Studies at McGill University.
I am the co-founder and project coordinator of the Life After Life
collective dedicated to the decriminalization of formerly incarcerated
girls, women, queer and trans youth.

Anthropologica - Call for Submissions/Appel de textes

The editors of Anthropologica are seeking submissions for the next
issue of the journal. Please forward your articles to Anthropologica
Editor-in-Chief, Naomi McPherson at:

naomi.mcpherson@ubc.ca

by December 1st, 2013.

Thank you for your interest.

*****************

Les rédacteurs d'Anthropologica attendent vos propositions de textes pour
le prochain numéro de la revue. Veuillez transmettre vos articles à la
rédactrice d'Anthropologica, Sylvie Poirier, à l'adresse:

sylvie.poirier@ant.ulaval.ca

avant le 1 décembre, 2013.

Merci de votre intérêt.

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Ethnographic Research on Education, UCLA

Committee on World Anthropologies

Inter-American Symposium on Ethnographic Research in Education, UCLA

September 18-20, 2013
More information can be found at http://conferences.gseis.ucla.edu/simposio.


Ethnographic research is inherently local, but it also requires comparison
to build toward general understandings. Yet ethnography of education, even
when practiced by anthropologists, tends to be nation-bound, particularly
in the United States. Not only do many US-based anthropologists lack
understanding of educational systems outside our borders, but we often
remain ignorant as well of the bodies of research published by
ethnographers in other countries, especially when published in languages
other than English.

To create the kind of direct engagement across languages and across
national epistemologies that would build a truly comparative ethnography
of education, UCLA will host an Inter-American Symposium on Ethnographic
Research in Education/Simposio Interamericano de Investigación Etnografía
en Educación September 18-20, 2013.The Simposio will bring together senior
scholars and students from Latin America, the United States and Canada to
share and discuss research in Spanish, Portuguese, French and English. The
main goal is to help scholars (especially Anglophone scholars) become
aware of research published in languages other than their own, and
to begin to grasp the social and intellectual contexts within which they
can appreciate that research.

The Simposio is the 13th in an irregular series first launched by Margaret
LeCompte, a former president of AAA's Council on Anthropology and
Education, with Gary Anderson and Mario Rueda Beltrán. Over the years,
Simposios have been held in both the United States and in Latin America,
the most recent being in Buenos Aires in 2006 and the Yucatán in 2008.

The UCLA meeting will take comparison to a new level by requiring
cross-hemisphere and cross-linguistic participation in every session. We
invite speakers to talk in (one of) their first language(s). A
multi-lingual format requires new rules, such as asking participants to
share drafts ahead of time and to project or pass out bilingual outlines
of their talks. We also allot 40 minutes per paper to allow time for
impromptu translation, clarification, and discussion with the help of
bilingual
scholars in the room. Although the plenary sessions will offer simultaneous
translation, in the smaller session we rely on collaborative mutual
interpretation.
We do so because we have found that when scholars read papers translated
into a less familiar languagethey may lose the intonation and drop the
gestures that help convey meaning. Meanwhile, professional simultaneous
interpretation often falls short because the interpreters do not know
social science terms and concepts. Instead, fellow scholars who happen to
be bilingual are in the best position to both translate and bridge between
different academic traditions, glossing the distinct meanings given to
similar terms in different nations.

This Simposio focuses on a specific theme to guarantee that our
comparisons have a common object. That object, "Majorities, minorities and
migrations," is a set of issues demanding urgent attention across the
Americas and also invoking differing social categories from nation to
nation. Native Americans (or First Nations, Pueblos Indios) share common
experiences of colonization, yet have diverse histories of assimilation,
segregation and recognition in each country. Since the conquest, multiple
migrations have led to reconfigurations of national populations and the
construction of various minorities through ethnic and racial categories.
Among these, the Latino minorities in the USA are part of transnational
majorities, and are fast becoming local majorities in many cities in
California. While US discussion has centered on "minorities" and
"immigrants," in Latin America, it has focused on the popular majorities
(working-class rural and urban, and indigenous peoples) who
were long excluded from formal education, and on rural-urban as well as
cross-border migrants. Thus discussion of research on these themes will
direct attention to contrasting ways in which scholars from different
parts of the hemisphere frame the issues.

The structure of the Simposio respects the grounding of ethnography in the
concrete and the local, while building toward the comparative and the more
general. During the first two days, up to 75 ethnographers will report on
specific ethnographic studies in the cross-national and multilingual
sessions. The third day will be devoted to workshops in which participants
funnel lessons from the research presented into the beginning of a
synthesis. In the morning, there will be three parallel workshops, one to
synthesize ideas on the theme of majorities/minorities, one on the theme
of migrations and one addressing the meta-issues of the challenges
of translation and comparison. In the afternoon, participants will gather
in a plenary workshop where, moderated by the leaders of each morning
workshop, they will identify common themes and divergent points across the
three morning sessions.

Juan Luis Sariego Rodríguez of the Escuela Nacional de Antropología e
Historia and Sofia Villenas of Cornell will offer Keynotes to frame the
research presentations.
In an Invited Roundtable, these senior ethnographers have been invited to
model a multilingual discussion. Among other participants will be a large
party of anthropologists from the Universidad de Buenos Aires; scholars
from the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais and the Universidade de São
Paulo; ethnographers from UNAM, the Universidad Pedagógica Nacional, and
the DIE-CINVESTAV, Mexico; and anthropologists and linguists from Teachers
College, Columbia University, SUNY Albany, the University of Nebraska,
Indiana University, and UCLA.

Elsie Rockwell of the DIE-CINVESTAV, Mexico, and Kathryn Anderson-Levitt
of UCLA are the organizers.

More information can be found at http://conferences.gseis.ucla.edu/simposio.

Bela Feldman-Bianco and Carla Guerrón Montero are contributing editors of
World Anthropologies, the AN column of the AAA Committee on World
Anthropologies.

Monday, May 13, 2013

The Australian Anthropological Society Conference in November 2013

Australian Anthropological Society Conference in November 2013

The Australian Anthropological Society annual conference will be held 4-6
November
in Canberra, Australia.
There is a total of 47 sessions – see:
http://www.aas.asn.au/conf13/call4papers.php


Two sessions of interest:
Ethnographies of the Political: Perspectives from the Asia-Pacific

Nicole Haley and Jack Corbett (State, Society and Governance in Melanesia,
School of International Political and Strategic Studies, College of Asia
and the Pacific,
ANU).

This session eschews viewing the political through preconceived categories
that belie the lived realities of people living in the region. Rather than
focussing on political systems and narrow definitions of government and
political institutions, this session seeks contributions from scholars who
examine politics that are broadly defined. We are particularly interested
in papers that take an ethnographic perspective that captures the robust
politics of the day-to-day.
Possible topics include: anthropologies of the state; the politics of
social and civil society movements; local forms of political
participation; community responses to extractive industries, land grabs
and neoliberalism; democratic disenchantment; and forms of local political
activism.

Contact: Nicole.Haley@anu.edu.au; Jack.Corbett@anu.edu.au

Ethnographies of Sorcery and Witchcraft: Perspectives from the Asia-Pacific.

Richard Eves (State, Society and Governance in Melanesia Program, ANU) and
Miranda Forsyth (Regulatory Institutions Network, ANU).

Despite the secular view, inherited from Weber, that recourse to magical
understandings of the world decline with modernity, evidence from many
parts of the world show that this is not so. The proliferation of new
forms of sorcery, and the sharp increase in accusations of sorcery and
witchcraft resulting in horrendous attacks on alleged practitioners, defy
this view of modernity. Several comparative volumes address the
anthropology of sorcery and witchcraft in the context of modernity from
regional perspectives. These include, for Melanesia, Stephen (1987,
Sorcerer and Witch in Melanesia); for Africa, Moore & Sanders
(2001, Magical Interpretations, Material Realities) and Comaroff &
Comaroff (1993, Modernity & its Malcontents); for Amazonia, Whitehead &
Wright (2004, In Darkness and Secrecy) and for South-East Asia, Watson &
Ellen (1993, Understanding Witchcraft and Secrecy in Southeast Asia).
However, very little work that examines the relationship between sorcery
and witchcraft and modernity in the Asia-Pacific region has appeared. The
convenors are interested in rich contemporary ethnographic case studies
from the Asia-Pacific region that capture the diversity of people's
beliefs in and practices of sorcery and witchcraft. The convenors also
welcome contributions that examine how sorcery and witchcraft beliefs and
practices are being responded to by the state, religious authorities and
local communities. We hope to publish an edited collection from this
session.

Contact: Richard.Eves@anu.edu.au

DRAFT Program for 'A Post-Human World? Rethinking Anthropology and the Human Condition' available now

Reply-To: Katarina Ferro <katarina.ferro@SYDNEY.EDU.AU>

The DRAFT program of the Sydney Anthropology Symposium: A Post-Human
World? Rethinking Anthropology and the Human Condition is now available on
our webpage: http://rethinkinganthropology.wordpress.com


2013 Anthropology Symposium 13-14 June:
A Post-Human World?
Rethinking Anthropology and the Human Condition
Camperdown Campus, The University of Sydney
http://rethinkinganthropology.wordpress.com
Please note that it is not the final version. We will put the final
schedule online as soon as it is finished. The DRAFT will give you an
insight into the interesting topics and themes, which will be raised and
discussed.

On our webpage you also find all the information you need to register for
the symposium, information on keynote speakers Marianne Lien (University
of Oslo) and Nikolas Kompridis (University of Western Sydney),
accommodation and many more useful things. We are updating the webpage on
a continuous basis, so please come back and check it out.

cheers

Katarina

http://rethinkinganthropology.wordpress.com

SUNTA undergraduate paper prize

SUNTA Undergraduate Paper Prize. Submissions Due September 20, 2013

The Society for Urban, National and Transnational/Global Anthropology is
pleased to announce its undergraduate paper prize competition. We are
seeking nominations - by faculty - of student papers that address SUNTA's
interests, including transnational social processes, impacts of
globalization, refugees and immigrants, urban life, space and place, and
poverty and homelessness. The prize includes a cash award of $150. The
winner will be announced at the 2013 AAA meetings in Chicago.
Papers should be submitted by email to Lindsay DuBois at
Lindsay.DuBois@dal.ca by September 20, 2013. Alternative submission
arrangements can be made through contacting Lindsay DuBois at the email
above. Any author who is a current undergraduate or who graduated in the
2013 calendar year is eligible for the competition, as long as the
submission was composed while s/he was an undergraduate. Although
submissions will be accepted from faculty only (students may not submit
papers on their own), faculty need not write in support: a nomination is
sufficient - letters of recommendation/justification are welcome but not
required. International entries are encouraged. SUNTA membership is not
required.

Papers should be no more than 30 double-spaced pages, 12-point font,
including bibliography, notes and images/figures. The paper¹s formatting
(e.g., citations, bibliographies etc.) should be consistent throughout.
Send queries to Lindsay DuBois (Lindsay.DuBois@dal.ca).

Saturday, May 11, 2013

CASCA: Job postings/Offres d'emploi

(English follows)

Les offres d'emploi suivantes viennent d'être ajoutées à notre banque.


-Urban Studies Foundation - Postdoctoral Research Fellowships

-Curator position, Michigan State University Museum

-Social Work and Human Service - Assistant Professor (Indigenous &/or
Racialized Scholar)
TRU

-Native Studies - Assistant Professor (Endowed Chair)
St. Thomas University

-Anthropology - 2 Probationary Regular Faculty Positions
Douglas College

-Curator of Anthropology
Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Colorado


Consultez-les ou voyez toute la liste en visitant notre site Web:

www.cas-sca.ca

Merci

**********

The following job postings have just been added to our job page:


-Urban Studies Foundation - Postdoctoral Research Fellowships

-Curator position, Michigan State University Museum

-Social Work and Human Service - Assistant Professor (Indigenous &/or
Racialized Scholar)
TRU

-Native Studies - Assistant Professor (Endowed Chair)
St. Thomas University

-Anthropology - 2 Probationary Regular Faculty Positions
Douglas College

-Curator of Anthropology
Denver Museum of Nature & Science
Colorado


See them and others on our website:

www.cas-sca.ca

Thank you

Thursday, May 9, 2013

The L. Carl Brown AIMS Book Prize in North African Studies for 2013

The L. Carl Brown AIMS Book Prize in North African Studies for 2013
Deadline: June 1, 2013


The American Institute for Maghrib Studies announces The L. Carl Brown AIMS
Book Prize in North African Studies for 2013
Established in 2013, the L. Carl Brown AIMS book prize is awarded annually
to the outstanding book in the area of North African studies. The winning
work reflects the innovative intellectual achievements in North African
Studies exemplified by Garrett Professor in Foreign Affairs and Professor
Emeritus at Princeton University, L. Carl Brown. The prize carries an
honorarium of $750.
The winner will be asked to give a brief presentation at the annual AIMS
business meeting of the Middle East Studies Association (MESA).

1. To be eligible for consideration, submissions shall be books in any
chronological period and any field of the humanities or social sciences
published in the English language. Books shall demonstrate originality of
research, new theoretical insights, and advance knowledge about North
Africa.
The committee reserves the right not to award the prize, if no book is found
deserving.

2. Books published in 2010, 2011, or 2012 are eligible for consideration
for
the 2013 award.

3. At the time of submission, the author(s) of the submitted work must be
current members of AIMS.

4. Three copies of the book must be sent to the American Institute of
Maghrib
Studies office at the University of Arizona:

AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR MAGHRIB STUDIES (AIMS)

School of Middle East and North African Studies (MENAS)

University of Arizona
845 N. Park Ave., Rm 470
Tucson, AZ 85721-0158

5. Each submission must be accompanied by an information sheet from the
publisher with the following information:

Author Name, Book Title, Publisher Name, Year of Publication, ISBN #
Contact name, phone, email.

To be considered for the prize, entries must be postmarked by or on June
1,
2013. Late entries cannot be considered.



--

Kerry Adams, PhD - AIMS Executive Director
Terry Ryan - AIMS Assistant Director
AMERICAN INSTITUTE FOR MAGHRIB STUDIES (AIMS)
School of Middle East and North African Studies (MENAS)
University of Arizona
845 N. Park Ave., Rm 470
Tucson, AZ 85721-0158
520-626-6498
520- 621-9257 (fax)
www.AIMSNorthAfrica.org

Like us on Facebook:
http://www.facebook.com/AmericanInstituteForMaghribStudies

Casca News

This blog mirrors the list-serv for the Canadian Anthropology Society. To submit an announcement to this list, please email: cascanews@anthropologica.ca

www.cas-sca.ca
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