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EDUCATION
Challenges of creating alliances across borders: midterm reflections from the AAPAAP reviews its two-year experience stressing lessons learned and shows how it has benefitted philosophically on the subject from recent linkage with the International Development Ethics Association, along with sharing the cross-border challenges faced. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17449626.2019.1641543">https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17449626.2019.1641543" rel="nofollow">https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17449626.2019.1641543By: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
Challenges of creating alliances across borders: midterm reflections from the AAPAAP reviews its two-year experience stressing lessons learned and shows how it has benefitted philosophically on the subject from recent linkage with the International Development Ethics Association, along with sharing the cross-border challenges faced. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17449626.2019.1641543">https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17449626.2019.1641543" rel="nofollow">https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/17449626.2019.1641543 Read moreBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
ICABR 2020 Conference African Scholar Travel Grant SubmissionCALL FOR ABSTRACTS 2020 Prospective participants are encouraged to propose papers, symposia, or posters in any area of applied bioeconomy research. Economists and other social scientists, biologists, policy makers, companies and students are encouraged to apply. The organizers are interested in proposals from Africa, China, India, the rest of Asia and Europe as well as the Americas. Proposals shall be submitted in any topic related to Bioeconomy. https://icabr.net/icabr-2020/call-for-abstracts-2020/">https://icabr.net/icabr-2020/call-for-abstracts-2020/" rel="nofollow">https://icabr.net/icabr-2020/call-for-abstracts-2020/ See eligibility criteria and learn about the application process in the link below! https://survey.uvm.edu/index.php/513867?newtest=Y&lang=en">https://survey.uvm.edu/index.php/513867?newtest=Y&lang=en" rel="nofollow">https://survey.uvm.edu/index.php/513867?newtest=Y&lang=enBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
ICABR 2020 Conference African Scholar Travel Grant SubmissionCALL FOR ABSTRACTS 2020 Prospective participants are encouraged to propose papers, symposia, or posters in any area of applied bioeconomy research. Economists and other social scientists, biologists, policy makers, companies and students are encouraged to apply. The organizers are interested in proposals from Africa, China, India, the rest of Asia and Europe as well as the Americas. Proposals shall be submitted in any topic related to Bioeconomy. https://icabr.net/icabr-2020/call-for-abstracts-2020/">https://icabr.net/icabr-2020/call-for-abstracts-2020/" rel="nofollow">https://icabr.net/icabr-2020/call-for-abstracts-2020/ See eligibility criteria and learn about the application process in the link below! https://survey.uvm.edu/index.php/513867?newtest=Y&lang=en">https://survey.uvm.edu/index.php/513867?newtest=Y&lang=en" rel="nofollow">https://survey.uvm.edu/index.php/513867?newtest=Y&lang=en Read moreBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
Call for the UASP Fellowships: Mid- to Senior-Level University LeadersThe UASP Fellowships in Research Management support the development of university research management and knowledge transfer capacity through a six-week fellowship in the United States for mid- to senior-level university leaders. Two weeks of training in Washington, DC, a virtual learning environment, and a four-week placement at a respected U.S. university support participants to build their universities into leading research institutions that impact their communities. Following the placement, fellows are supported to implement reforms in their home institution. Click the link to learn more! https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp" rel="nofollow">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp" rel="nofollow">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp" rel="nofollow">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uaspBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
Call for the UASP Fellowships: Mid- to Senior-Level University LeadersThe UASP Fellowships in Research Management support the development of university research management and knowledge transfer capacity through a six-week fellowship in the United States for mid- to senior-level university leaders. Two weeks of training in Washington, DC, a virtual learning environment, and a four-week placement at a respected U.S. university support participants to build their universities into leading research institutions that impact their communities. Following the placement, fellows are supported to implement reforms in their home institution. Click the link to learn more! https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp" rel="nofollow">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp" rel="nofollow">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp" rel="nofollow">https://www.irex.org/project/university-administration-support-program-uasp Read moreBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
ASA 2020 Annual Meeting: Presentation Proposal Submissions are Open!Submissions are open for all presentation proposal types for the 2020 ASA Annual Meeting The Hour of Decision: Power, Persistence, Purpose, and Possibility in African Studies in Washington D.C. November 19-21 2020! Click the link to read more! https://africanstudies.org/annual-meetings/2020-submission-guidelines/">https://africanstudies.org/annual-meetings/2020-submission-guidelines/" rel="nofollow">https://africanstudies.org/annual-meetings/2020-submission-guidelines/By: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
ASA 2020 Annual Meeting: Presentation Proposal Submissions are Open!Submissions are open for all presentation proposal types for the 2020 ASA Annual Meeting The Hour of Decision: Power, Persistence, Purpose, and Possibility in African Studies in Washington D.C. November 19-21 2020! Click the link to read more! https://africanstudies.org/annual-meetings/2020-submission-guidelines/">https://africanstudies.org/annual-meetings/2020-submission-guidelines/" rel="nofollow">https://africanstudies.org/annual-meetings/2020-submission-guidelines/ Read moreBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
Call for papers for 11th EOGAN Annual Conference Open!EOGAN is pleased to announce a call for papers for the 11th EOGAN Conference, the network of energy archives and researchers. This year the conference is organised in collaboration with the University of Aberdeen, and will take place in Wick (Scotland, UK), at the very special headquarters of NUCLEUS. The theme for the 2020 Conference is ‘The role of energy archives in present & future energy policies’. As more and more States declare climate emergency, and energy shifts become impelling, long-term data and knowledge about the development of energy systems are more and more required. This conference aims to discuss how energy history and energy archives can inform present energy knowledge and energy policies. Click the link to read more! https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020By: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
Call for papers for 11th EOGAN Annual Conference Open!EOGAN is pleased to announce a call for papers for the 11th EOGAN Conference, the network of energy archives and researchers. This year the conference is organised in collaboration with the University of Aberdeen, and will take place in Wick (Scotland, UK), at the very special headquarters of NUCLEUS. The theme for the 2020 Conference is ‘The role of energy archives in present & future energy policies’. As more and more States declare climate emergency, and energy shifts become impelling, long-term data and knowledge about the development of energy systems are more and more required. This conference aims to discuss how energy history and energy archives can inform present energy knowledge and energy policies. Click the link to read more! https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020" rel="nofollow">https://www.eogan.org/nucleus-wick-2020 Read moreBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
CFP: New Critical Currents in Global South Studies in CLSIn recent years, the Global South has emerged as a predominant critical concept in academic circles and public discourse.The journal The Global South, founded in 2007, is entering its second decade. Global South centers and institutes have been established at academic institutions around the globe. Click on the link to learn more https://globalsouthstudies.as.virginia.edu/cfp-new-critical-currents-global-south-studies-cls" rel="nofollow">https://globalsouthstudies.as.virginia.edu/cfp-new-critical-currents-global-south-studies-clsBy: Elaina Lawrence -
EDUCATION
CFP: New Critical Currents in Global South Studies in CLSIn recent years, the Global South has emerged as a predominant critical concept in academic circles and public discourse.The journal The Global South, founded in 2007, is entering its second decade. Global South centers and institutes have been established at academic institutions around the globe. Click on the link to learn more https://globalsouthstudies.as.virginia.edu/cfp-new-critical-currents-global-south-studies-cls" rel="nofollow">https://globalsouthstudies.as.virginia.edu/cfp-new-critical-currents-global-south-studies-cls Read moreBy: Elaina Lawrence -
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
African Futures Feature Series: Deborah RuthDr. Deborah Ruth Amulen from Uganda is a lecturer at Makerere University, in the Department of Livestock and Industrial Resources. She obtained a Bachelors’ degree in Animal Production Technology and Management, then a Master’s of Science in Livestock Development Planning and Management, and later pursued a PhD in Applied Biological Sciences from Ghent University in Belgium, where she focused on applied beekeeping in the African context. Deborah is deeply passionate about insect research, product development and community resource mobilization towards harnessing beneficial insects. This passion started at a young age, seeing as insects are a part of her food culture. Deborah was born and raised in a rural agro-pastoral community in Eastern Uganda (the Iteso) where insects are a part of the local diet. She says, “We eat crickets, termites, and black ants; it’s sad that such delicacies are not readily available due to many factors, such as seasonal and limited knowledge of how to multiply them locally. If I can get advanced skills and work with partners to ensure these nutritious protein sources remain available to our communities, I would be glad.” Finding ways to ensure these nutritious protein sources remain available to African communities is exactly what Deborah will be doing here at MSU. Through conducting research on the topic of insect farming with food waste to produce an alternative protein source with the department of entomology, she will be applying her educational background and career interests to address the economic, nutritional and environmental needs of communities. Deborah will also be applying her culture to her research and time at MSU. She feels that to an institution like Michigan State University that embraces diversity, she can significantly contribute through lessons on how to live in rural communities. Deborah says, “when you see me now, you see me as postdoctoral fellow, this is not something that came easy.” Deborah’s story is of a girl in pursuit of a better life outside the marginal agro-pastoral rural livelihoods of Teso, Uganda. She worked hard for her education and the place she is now in her career, and she believes that she can bring a humble and diligent mindset to MSU and her research. During and after her time doing research, among other things, Deborah hopes to contribute to the research world as a mentor for other hardworking and brilliant women in the field of science. She says that being a woman scientist in Africa is challenging. Most of her colleagues are taken up by family roles and drop out of research early. For women in Africa, it is difficult to balance family obligations and professional goals, but Deborah and the other scholars are proof that if you put your mind to something it is possible. To any women researchers who are struggling in the research world, Deborah says, “Passion, focus, and perseverance will lead you to your destination. Every discipline is good, it just needs concentration.”By: Elaina Lawrence -
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
African Futures Feature Series: Deborah RuthDr. Deborah Ruth Amulen from Uganda is a lecturer at Makerere University, in the Department of Livestock and Industrial Resources. She obtained a Bachelors’ degree in Animal Production Technology and Management, then a Master’s of Science in Livestock Development Planning and Management, and later pursued a PhD in Applied Biological Sciences from Ghent University in Belgium, where she focused on applied beekeeping in the African context. Deborah is deeply passionate about insect research, product development and community resource mobilization towards harnessing beneficial insects. This passion started at a young age, seeing as insects are a part of her food culture. Deborah was born and raised in a rural agro-pastoral community in Eastern Uganda (the Iteso) where insects are a part of the local diet. She says, “We eat crickets, termites, and black ants; it’s sad that such delicacies are not readily available due to many factors, such as seasonal and limited knowledge of how to multiply them locally. If I can get advanced skills and work with partners to ensure these nutritious protein sources remain available to our communities, I would be glad.” Finding ways to ensure these nutritious protein sources remain available to African communities is exactly what Deborah will be doing here at MSU. Through conducting research on the topic of insect farming with food waste to produce an alternative protein source with the department of entomology, she will be applying her educational background and career interests to address the economic, nutritional and environmental needs of communities. Deborah will also be applying her culture to her research and time at MSU. She feels that to an institution like Michigan State University that embraces diversity, she can significantly contribute through lessons on how to live in rural communities. Deborah says, “when you see me now, you see me as postdoctoral fellow, this is not something that came easy.” Deborah’s story is of a girl in pursuit of a better life outside the marginal agro-pastoral rural livelihoods of Teso, Uganda. She worked hard for her education and the place she is now in her career, and she believes that she can bring a humble and diligent mindset to MSU and her research. During and after her time doing research, among other things, Deborah hopes to contribute to the research world as a mentor for other hardworking and brilliant women in the field of science. She says that being a woman scientist in Africa is challenging. Most of her colleagues are taken up by family roles and drop out of research early. For women in Africa, it is difficult to balance family obligations and professional goals, but Deborah and the other scholars are proof that if you put your mind to something it is possible. To any women researchers who are struggling in the research world, Deborah says, “Passion, focus, and perseverance will lead you to your destination. Every discipline is good, it just needs concentration.” Read moreBy: Elaina Lawrence