Call for applications: John Peters Humphrey Fellowship in International Human Rights or International Organization

Open to students at Canadian institutions studying law or studying at an advanced level in political science, the John Peters Humphrey Fellowship is awarded to outstanding students to support them in the pursuit of full-time graduate studies in the fields of international human rights or international organization at leading institutions in Canada or worldwide. Eligibility criteria and the 2014 application are available here. The deadline to apply is November 22, 2013.

Human Rights Review books available for review

You are invited to review a book for Human Rights Review. The list of “Books Available for Review” includes over one hundred titles and can be found on the Human Rights Review webpage under FOR AUTHORS AND EDITORS at:

http://www.springer.com/law/journal/12142

If you are interested in doing a “Review Essay,” you can select three (3) books that touch on common themes. There are web links to the publishers of the books for general information regarding the focus of each book on the list.

Please contact Dr. Lilian A. Barria at labarria@eiu.edu OR hrrbooks@eiu.edu with any questions and/or to request a book from the current list for review.

Interested reviewers should provide:

(1) A mailing address
(2) An estimated deadline for completion of the review (four possible deadlines from which to choose: February 1, 2014; April 1, 2014; June 1, 2014; or August 1, 2014).

Reviews are generally published in the journal 6-12 months after the review is received.

CfP Student Conference: The Human, Human Rights, and the Humanities.

I wanted to call your attention to an upcoming conference at the University
of Kansas for undergraduate and graduate student researchers on “The Human,
Human Rights, and the Humanities.” The conference will be held April 3-4,
2014, and paper abstracts are due Dec. 6.

This conference offers a venue to critically examine the interrelationship
of “the human,” human rights, and the purview of the
humanities–interpreting human expression. We welcome papers from
undergraduate and graduate students in the humanities and social sciences
that explore topics including, but not limited to, the following:

* What are the benefits and limits to a notion of universal human rights?
* Are there notions of being human that are not encapsulated by a human
rights framework?
* How do artists and writers engage or critique notions of human rights?
* What can we learn about the human experience, and, potentially human
rights, from a speculative vantage point, such as that of science fiction?
* How do disciplines that challenge normative parameters of human
experience such as Queer Studies, Disability Studies, or Animal Studies
enrich and/ or complicate notions of human rights?

Please submit 250 word paper abstracts to Dr. Marike Janzen, mjanzen@ku.edu,
by December 6, 2013

Call for Research Proposals: Effectiveness of Torture Prevention

The APT has released a call for proposals (http://www.apt.ch/en/working-with-us/) for researchers to contribute to its ongoing project on the effectiveness of torture prevention (http://www.apt.ch/en/research-project/).

The APT is seeking country researchers to work in 12 countries out of a shortlist of 26 countries: Albania, Armenia, Benin, Colombia, Georgia, Honduras, Hungary, India, Israel, Kenya, Kyrgyzstan, Malawi, Malaysia, Maldives, Mexico, Montenegro, Morocco, Nepal, Peru, Philippines, Senegal, South Africa, Taiwan, Thailand, Tunisia, Zimbabwe. The work includes researching and drafting a chapter on the country’s experience with incidence of torture and prevention measures since 1985, as well as gathering data to contribute to a comparative quantitative analysis of torture incidence and prevention.

Researchers with the relevant experience are invited to submit proposals, including a budget. The working language of the project is English, so a basic understanding of that language will be required. However, applicants may include a budget line for translation of documents. The deadline for applications is 1st November 2013 and work on the project will begin in January 2014.

The full call is available here: http://www.apt.ch/content/files/apt%20institutional/Research%20project_call_for_proposal.pdf.

Australian Postgraduate Scholarships and University Research Scholarship, ANU, Canberra, Australia

The Australian National University College of Law is currently offering four Australian Postgraduate Scholarships and one University Research Scholarship (each worth about $25,000 a year, plus some other benefits). We are very keen to receive more applications so could you please draw attention to these scholarships to your networks. Applications close on 31 October.

The first person to contact about these scholarships is:

Dinah Irvine
HDR & Military Program Coordinator
ANU College of Law &
National Centre for Indigenous Studies
Fellows Road, Building 5
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200 Australia

T: +61 2 6125 5877
ResearchDegreesLaw@law.anu.edu.au

Letters from Samoa: Talent auditions, Law & Justice Open Day

Last week was a busy week for us here at the NHRI. Firstly we had our first round of auditions for our TV Talent Show, Samoa Rights Taleni. We had a variety of contestants, and some were selected to participate in the TV show. I can’t give away too much just yet, but can say there were a couple of standout contestants who can really deliver the talent we were hoping to see. Some performed poems, others dance, songs, and even a fantastic rap channeling Martin Luther King Jr’s I Have a Dream speech crossed with Coolio’s Gangsta’s Paradise. We have another round of auditions at the end of the month. Keep your eyes peeled on Samoa’s TV1 in the month of November… Continue reading

Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics

FASPE (Fellowships at Auschwitz for the Study of Professional Ethics), in
collaboration with The Museum of Jewish Heritage—A Living Memorial to the
Holocaust, is accepting applications from graduate students in law,
medicine, journalism, and religion for a fellowship that uses the conduct
of professionals in Nazi Germany as a launching point for an intensive
two-week summer program on contemporary ethics in these fields.
Fellowships include an all-expense-paid trip from New York to Berlin,
Krakow, and Oświęcim (Auschwitz) where students will work with leading
faculty to explore both the history and the ethical issues facing
individuals in these professions today. All program costs, including
international and European travel, lodging, and food, are covered.

Twelve to fifteen Fellows from each profession will be chosen to
participate in FASPE 2014 through a competitive process that draws
applicants from across the country. The dates for the 2014 trips are:

Journalism and Law: May 25 – June 5, 2014;
Medical and Seminary: June 15 – June 26, 2014

Completed applications must be received by December 20th for Seminary
students and January 6, 2014 for Law, Journalism and Medical students.

Candidates of all religious, ethnic, and cultural backgrounds are
encouraged to apply.

To apply or to learn more about FASPE, please visit: www.FASPE.info
http://www.mjhnyc.org/faspe/documents/FASPEFlyer-2014-v.1_000.pdf

If you have any questions, please contact Thorin R. Tritter, Managing
Director of FASPE, at ttritter@FASPE.info.

CfP: 3rd Annual Forum on Human Rights – “(En)Gendering Human Rights”

Call for Proposals from Undergraduate and Graduate Student Researchers

3rd Annual College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences Forum on Human Rights
“(En)Gendering Human Rights”

February 28, 2014
Virginia Tech

The 3rd Annual College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences Research Forum on Human Rights, “(En)Gendering Human Rights,” will take place on the campus of Virginia Tech located in Blacksburg Virginia. All the papers and creative works will be presented on Friday, February 28, 2014. Pending funding, lodging may be provided for presenters travelling from other universities. The most promising papers and creative works will be considered for possible publication in Societies Without Borders: Human Rights and the Social Sciences and/or Philologia, the journal of undergraduate research published by the College of Liberal Arts and Human Sciences at Virginia Tech. Continue reading

CfP: Genocide in World History

World History Bulletin
Special Issue
Genocide in World History
Spring 2014
Final Call For Papers

To mark the twentieth anniversary of the Rwanda genocide, The World History
Bulletin is accepting submissions for a forthcoming issue focusing on
genocide in world history under the guest editorship of Phil Cantrell
(Longwood University). Authors may consider all aspects of historical
scholarship, including research, pedagogy, or theory. Course syllabi with
commentary on teaching comparative genocides or genocide in world history
are especially desirable. Interested authors should contact Dr Phil Cantrell
at cantrellpa@longwood.edu.
Authors should keep in mind that the World History Bulletin’s audience is
composed of specialists in a diverse range of historical fields and
periods, in addition to K-12 teachers. Thus, articles should be made as
clear and accessible as possible for this diverse readership. The World
History Bulletin publishes articles of varying lengths; though submissions
between 500 and 5,000 words will be considered, we are especially
interested in contributions of 1,500-3,500 words. The deadline for
submissions is November 30, 2013.

Lecturer in the law and institutions of the European Union

Starting date January 1, 2014.

The candidate will be expected to teach the law and institutions of the European Union. Scholars with a broad interest in interdisciplinary approaches to EU studies and a demonstrable knowledge of European law are particularly invited to apply. The MA European Union Studies is a dynamic programme, which offers its staff ample opportunity to give substance to their teaching. The lecturer will hold a position in the Institute for History.

For more information, see here.