Posts in PFL News and Activities
INCITE's REALM project releases its Request for Applications

After hosting three meetings that convened migration researchers from all over the world, INCITE's Research on Empirical Analysis of Labor Migration (REALM) project released its Request for Applications on March 15, 2016. The REALM team looks forward to reading proposals as they come in on June 15.

READ THE RFA

REALM will fund a series of substantively interlinked projects that share a data and administrative core. REALM aims to shed light on the processes that sustain unfair migrant labor by improving our empirical understanding of the structures and dynamics implicated in recruitment for temporary work in the Gulf Cooperation Council countries. While the focus is on sending countries, our analytical scope is expansive, ranging from individual motivations and expectations to meso-level processes of job matching and recruitment, and to the broader dynamics of labor supply and demand. Our goals are to review and collate existing knowledge, identify key empirical questions for further study, and support collaborative research that will advance our understanding of labor migration processes. In particular, we look to innovative ways to build data structures that can provide the foundation for robust, substantive and empirically grounded insights.

For more information, visit the project page.

Fall semester 2015 begins with two workshop series and new fellows

To begin the 2015-2016 academic year, INCITE is pleased to welcome its new cohort to the Mellon Interdisciplinary Fellows Program. Read more about them here.

Two exciting workshop series begin on September 24, 2015. Check out the Oral History and Public Dialogue workshop series, hosted by our Oral History Master of Arts (OHMA) program at Columbia University, lineup for Fall 2015:

Thursday, September 24, 2015, 6 - 8 PM
Roots and Fruits of Activism in Washington Heights and New York City
Laura Altschuler, Sixto Medina, and Rob Snyder

Thursday, October 1, 2015, 6 - 8 PM
The Anti-Eviction Mapping Project: Oral History, Radical Mapping and Displacement in San Francisco
Manissa Maharawal

Thursday, October 8, 2015, 6 - 8 PM
Oral History and Cross-Cultural Dialogues: Building Bridges with Artistic Projects
Judith Sloan

Thursday, October 22, 2015, 6 - 8 PM
When Truth Is Justice: Narratives of Black Women and Sexual Assault Across Generations
Farah Tanis

Thursday, November 12, 2015, 6 - 8 PM
This Muslim American Life
Moustafa Bayoumi

Thursday, December 3, 2015, 6 - 8 PM
How You Sing Your Song: Miguel Zenón's Oral History-Based Music
Miguel Zenón with Erica Wrightson

 

Additionally, our Networks and Time lecture series continues:

September 24, 12:00 - 2:00 pm (Thursday), Knox Hall 509
Elizabeth Roberto, Princeton University
Spatial Boundaries and the Local Context of Residential Segregation

October 15, 12:00 - 2:00 pm (Thursday), Knox Hall 509
Benjamin Cornwell, Cornell University
A Day in the Life Course: Demonstrating a Network Approach to Studying the Social Structure of Time 

October 27, 12:00 - 2:00 pm (Thursday), location TBD
Robb Willer, Stanford University
The Declining Status of White Americans and the Rise of the Tea Party

 

Please mark your calendars - we look forward to seeing you in the room.

 

2013-14 Mellon Interdisciplinary Fellows Announced

The Mellon Interdisciplinary Graduate Fellows program, organized by INCITE and funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, is pleased to announce its cohort of 13 new fellows for the 2013-14 academic year. Members of the cohort span the social sciences, humanities, and life and behavioral sciences.They will join seven returning Mellon fellows from the 2012-13 cohort.

Click here for learn about the current cohort.

Click here to learn more about the program.

 

Call for Applications for the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholars

The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health & Society Scholars program, including our Columbia University site, is designed to build the nation's capacity for research, leadership and policy change to address the multiple determinants of population health. The program is based on the principle that progress in the field of population health depends upon multidisciplinary collaboration and exchange. Its goal is to improve health by training scholars to:

  • investigate rigorously the connections among biological, genetic, behavioral, environmental, economic and social determinants of health; and

  • develop, evaluate and disseminate knowledge and interventions that integrate and act on these determinants to improve health.


The program is intended to produce leaders who will change the questions asked, the methods employed to analyze problems, and the range of solutions to reduce population health disparities and improve the health of all Americans.

Click here to apply.

Vote for PFL Project in GOOD Challenge

THE VOTING DEADLINE FOR THIS HAS PASSED

We have recently launched an initiative to bring together a diverse group of New York-based leaders and change agents and equip them with tools to use oral history in service of their mission. The program, entitled Telling Lives, has already convened two workshops attracting 30 advocates from organizations like Picture the Homeless and Make the Road-NY.

We now have an exciting opportunity through an online competition with Good Magazine to receive seed funding to further develop and expand this initiative to more communities in New York. As longtime supporters of the Center, we ask that you take two minutes out of your day, vote for our project here, and encourage others to vote as well. 

The program is co-sponsored by the Columbia Center for Oral History and the Oral History Master of Arts program. Click here to learn more about the workshops.

Voting Instructions

• Visit the Telling Lives page at: http://jumo-organizations.maker.good.is/projects/Telling-Lives

• Click "Vote for this Idea" to vote for us!

• Log in with your GOOD account. If you don't have a GOOD account, it's free to join. All you need is an email address or a Facebook account to register.

•If you use an email address, you will be emailed a link that you need to click in order to verify your address.

• Once you've voted, you'll get a notification at the top of the screen verifying that your vote has been counted.

• Remember, you can only vote once during the entire voting period, so please let your friends know and spread the word!

Global Centers Grant Program Launches

Seed funding supports interdisciplinary research, strengthens research infrastructure of Columbia Global Centers

CLICK HERE TO DOWNLOAD PRESS RELEASE

Media contact:  Michael Falco, 212-854-9489, mf2727@columbia.edu  

NEW YORK, January 12, 2012 — In an effort to enhance global research opportunities for Columbia University faculty and researchers, INCITE, Columbia Global Centers, and the Office of the President Lee C. Bollinger have launched a seed grant program to fund innovative and ambitious research at the Columbia Global Centers.

“This program is essential to deepening our engagement with global scholars, ideas and challenges,” said President Bollinger. “This is an important step in building vibrant global research programs that leverage Columbia’s diverse intellectual capacities with our growing network of Global Centers, while also engaging our Centers’ local and regional partners.”

The  Global Centers Research Grant Program facilitates Columbia’s emergence as a global university and promotes international collaborations. Seed grant funds are designed to strengthen the research infrastructure at the Global Centers, ensure the sustainability of an active program of research, and foster deeper connections with Columbia-based researchers and research institutions.

The seed grant program is open to Columbia University faculty and international research partners working on projects that can be facilitated by the Global Centers. INCITE anticipates awarding 8 to 10 grants during the next two years for approximately $30,000 each. The grants strongly encourage interdisciplinary research proposals, partnerships with Columbia-based social science researchers, and collaborations among the Global Centers.    

“Since its launch, Columbia’s network of Global Centers has aimed to bring together some of the world's finest scholars to address some of the world’s most pressing problems,” said Kenneth Prewitt, vice president of Columbia Global Centers and Carnegie Professor of Public Affairs. “These grants will bring more intellectual firepower to our burgeoning Centers and foster greater collaboration between the Centers to improve our understanding of critical issues that unite the Centers.”

The submission deadline for seed funding is March 15, 2012.  Global Centers Research Grants enable faculty to produce compelling, well-crafted external funding proposals by laying the groundwork for long-term research projects. A committee of affiliated faculty and members of the Columbia administration will assess the merits of proposals, such as whether the project contributes to the Global Center’s research capacity.

The first two Columbia Global Centers — in Beijing, China, and in Amman, Jordan —were launched in March 2009. Centers in Mumbai, India, and in Paris, France, opened in March 2010. In the fall centers in Santiago, Chile, and Istanbul, Turkey, were announced. A center in Nairobi, Kenya, will open in early 2012. 

 

About Columbia University

A leading academic and research university, Columbia University continually seeks to advance the frontiers of knowledge and to foster a campus community deeply engaged in understanding and addressing the complex global issues of our time. Columbia’s extensive public service initiatives, cultural collaborations and community partnerships help define the University’s underlying values and mission to educate students to be both leading scholars and informed, engaged citizens. Founded in 1754 as King’s College, Columbia University in the City of New York is the fifth oldest institution of higher learning in the United States.

About Columbia Global Centers     

Columbia Global Centers provide flexible regional hubs for a wide range of activities and resources intended to enhance the quality of research and learning at the University. They establish interactive partnerships across geographic boundaries and academic disciplines by bringing together scholars, students, public officials, private enterprise and innovators from many fields.

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