Overview
The Center for Gender Studies at the University of Chicago invites applications for a one-year postdoctoral fellowship beginning September 15, 2011 and lasting through the academic year. The fellow will take a leading role in a Sawyer Seminar titled "International Women's Human Rights: Paradigms, Paradoxes, and Possibilities," which is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, will teach one undergraduate course on the seminar's issues during the 2011-12 academic year, and will co-organize one undergraduate workshop/conference.
The postdoctoral fellow may come from law, theological studies, or any discipline in the social sciences or humanities. Theme of Sawyer Seminar: The seminar is designed to address contradictions within the concept and practice of women's human rights. Such contradictions can be seen in the notion of a "women's crusade" that sets up an increasingly suspect opposition between the plights of women in developing countries on the one hand and advanced industrialized countries on the other, in the appropriation of the language of women's rights by groups unsympathetic to Western rights-based feminism, in the use of human rights discourse to justify military interventions, and in the reliance on a Western liberal framework that is inattentive to crucial cultural, social, and political national differences, that privileges civil and political rights over social and economic rights, and that tends to construe women in the developing world as victims of a stalled or failed modernization process. The seminar's task will be to address but also attempt to move beyond current formulations of the inherent difficulties and complexities associated with thinking about transnational feminism as a practice of declaring and claiming women's human rights. This will involve, among other things, a comparative approach to women's human rights which analyzes the differences and similarities between the European and the Indian rights traditions. We will consider applications from candidates with backgrounds in the humanities, social sciences, law, or theological studies who have scholarly interests in the central themes of the Seminar.
Eligibility: The applicant must have received her or his PhD or JD between September 16, 2006 and September 15, 2011. The stipend for the postdoctoral fellowship is $50,000, plus benefits. One quarter of teaching (Autumn or Winter) is required, and the fellow is expected to be in residence full-time in academic year 2011-12.
Application: Interested candidates should submit a cover letter 1) outlining their research and its relation to the seminar's theme; 2) what they plan to accomplish during their year at the University of Chicago; 3) their long-term research goals; 4) a sample syllabus for an undergraduate course on the seminar theme. Applicants will be hosted at and affiliated with the Center for Gender Studies. If applicants wish to affiliate with an additional department or have specific faculty with whom they wish to collaborate, they may indicate this in the cover letter. Applicants should send a current curriculum vitae and an article-length writing sample to Sarah Tuohey, Center for Gender Studies, 5733 S. University Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Applicants should also request letters from two referees to be sent to this same address. Applications and letters of support must be received by February 4, 2011 to be considered. Please contact Sarah Tuohey at stuohey@uchicago.edu with questions. Seminar coordinators: Linda Zerilli, Charles E. Merriam Distinguished Professor of Political Science and the College; Martha Nussbaum, Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics; Jane Dailey, Associate Professor History and the College (all at the University of Chicago)
http://www.uchicago.edu/index.shtml
Please quote Scholarization.blogspot.com on your application when applying for this scholarship
The Center for Gender Studies at the University of Chicago invites applications for a one-year postdoctoral fellowship beginning September 15, 2011 and lasting through the academic year. The fellow will take a leading role in a Sawyer Seminar titled "International Women's Human Rights: Paradigms, Paradoxes, and Possibilities," which is funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, will teach one undergraduate course on the seminar's issues during the 2011-12 academic year, and will co-organize one undergraduate workshop/conference.
The postdoctoral fellow may come from law, theological studies, or any discipline in the social sciences or humanities. Theme of Sawyer Seminar: The seminar is designed to address contradictions within the concept and practice of women's human rights. Such contradictions can be seen in the notion of a "women's crusade" that sets up an increasingly suspect opposition between the plights of women in developing countries on the one hand and advanced industrialized countries on the other, in the appropriation of the language of women's rights by groups unsympathetic to Western rights-based feminism, in the use of human rights discourse to justify military interventions, and in the reliance on a Western liberal framework that is inattentive to crucial cultural, social, and political national differences, that privileges civil and political rights over social and economic rights, and that tends to construe women in the developing world as victims of a stalled or failed modernization process. The seminar's task will be to address but also attempt to move beyond current formulations of the inherent difficulties and complexities associated with thinking about transnational feminism as a practice of declaring and claiming women's human rights. This will involve, among other things, a comparative approach to women's human rights which analyzes the differences and similarities between the European and the Indian rights traditions. We will consider applications from candidates with backgrounds in the humanities, social sciences, law, or theological studies who have scholarly interests in the central themes of the Seminar.
Eligibility: The applicant must have received her or his PhD or JD between September 16, 2006 and September 15, 2011. The stipend for the postdoctoral fellowship is $50,000, plus benefits. One quarter of teaching (Autumn or Winter) is required, and the fellow is expected to be in residence full-time in academic year 2011-12.
Application: Interested candidates should submit a cover letter 1) outlining their research and its relation to the seminar's theme; 2) what they plan to accomplish during their year at the University of Chicago; 3) their long-term research goals; 4) a sample syllabus for an undergraduate course on the seminar theme. Applicants will be hosted at and affiliated with the Center for Gender Studies. If applicants wish to affiliate with an additional department or have specific faculty with whom they wish to collaborate, they may indicate this in the cover letter. Applicants should send a current curriculum vitae and an article-length writing sample to Sarah Tuohey, Center for Gender Studies, 5733 S. University Avenue, Chicago, Illinois 60637. Applicants should also request letters from two referees to be sent to this same address. Applications and letters of support must be received by February 4, 2011 to be considered. Please contact Sarah Tuohey at stuohey@uchicago.edu with questions. Seminar coordinators: Linda Zerilli, Charles E. Merriam Distinguished Professor of Political Science and the College; Martha Nussbaum, Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Ethics; Jane Dailey, Associate Professor History and the College (all at the University of Chicago)
http://www.uchicago.edu/index.shtml
Please quote Scholarization.blogspot.com on your application when applying for this scholarship
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