CFP: Sounds of War
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CFP: Sounds of War
The Harrison Ruffin Tyler Department of History at the College of William & Mary invites applications for a two-year, non-tenure-track position in African history (field/period open) to begin August 10, 2023. The successful applicant is expected to be an effective teacher and will have a 3-3 teaching load, including a survey of African history, freshman seminars, and upper division courses in African history.
Required Qualifications: Applicants are required to hold a Master’s degree.
BOOK TALK & SIGNING | More than Scenery: Yellowstone, an American Love Story with Janet L. Pritchard
Wednesday 5 April 2023, 3–5PM
Barnes & Noble UConn, 1 Royce Circle, Storrs, CT 06268
Talk begins at 3:00PM, with refreshments and signing to follow.
The Connecticut State Museum of Natural History (CSMNH) is pleased to be hosting Janet L. Pritchard for a talk and signing event for her new book More than Scenery: Yellowstone, an American Love Story.
The Department of History at the University at Buffalo, The State University of New York, invites applications for an open-rank, tenure-line faculty position in the History of Health, Disability, and/or Science in Africa. All regional specializations and time periods will be considered. Interdisciplinary scholars are welcome to apply. Review of applications will begin February 14, 2023, and continue until appointment is made at the rank of advanced assistant, associate, or full professor. Salary and compensation will be competitive, commensurate with rank and achievement.
Job Description:
The Institute for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention (I-GMAP) at Binghamton University, the State University of New York, invites applications for the position of Visiting Assistant Professor of Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention.
Greetings from the Southern Historical Association’s Junior Scholars Workshop! The Junior Scholars Workshop is designed to encourage advanced graduate student and recent graduates in the field of southern history by providing an opportunity to share their work with and receive constructive feedback from senior historians. Now in its second year, attendees of the Junior Scholars Workshops participate in new and diverse scholarly research discussions on southern history.
What would development look like if its practitioners and scholars were ‘against NGOs,’ challenging common sense about them? This book presents a critical perspective on NGOs, describing how they emerged as key agents of development over time. Through an interpretative history based on Gramscian concepts it shows how civil society organizations were gradually enlisted in development as non-state technocratic actors. The book argues that management studies and development studies emerged as commonsensical explanations for capitalist crises.
India ChIna Institute will host a series of online seminars from February 27-March 10, titled "Flows, Infrastructure and Citizenship in India and China." The seminars are being organized by Dr. Sarandha Jain, the 2022-3 post-doctoral fellow at ICI. The four dialogues will explore how flows, infrastructures, and citizenship encounter each other, and what their co-arrangements mean for the evolving nature of the state. How do flows of people, objects, and natural substances facilitate and/or obstruct the constructions of infrastructure, and vice versa?
Dear all,
With my co-author we'd be interested in joining a panel at the 2023 ASEEES convention on topics related to gender, identity, racial and ethnic minorities, indigenous people, or Eurasian studies.
In Hamlet’s soliloquy, the phrase “undiscovered country” refers to “death, The undiscovered country, from whose bourn / No traveler returns.” In this light, the phrase speaks to the urgency of global climate change as the earth passes benchmarks on the way to “irreversible” transformation, making significant parts of the globe uninhabitable by humans and other species.