Forwarding for a colleague -- see announcement for contact info.

Dear Friends and colleagues,
Please share with your networks broadly, and encourage any candidates to
reach out to me if they have any questions.

https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/18464
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/18464__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!DqMtnNVUwt2EsmjNir_QW5xcD94Gwl0hMLM9tflnXWQkHmXOiRpA_ZIlG_Feueh4mjX0T7zua0MvKw$>


The Global Racial Justice research program within the Einaudi Center for
International Studies at Cornell University aims to cultivate new
collaborations that advance scholarship, knowledge dissemination, teaching,
outreach, and engagement with the general public. We seek to generate new
insights into the intersectional, multi-faceted, globally relevant, and
locally contextualized challenge of racial, ethnic, and/or religious
inequality and discrimination. Racial justice is broadly defined within an
international landscape. We wish to provide a stronger understanding and
evidentiary basis for policy and social reconciliations and redress.

The Einaudi Global Racial Justice (GRJ) Post-doctoral Fellows may conduct
research in any discipline, including the natural, quantitative, and social
sciences, humanities, and the creative arts, as well as interdisciplinary
research that transcends traditional disciplines. The Fellows will be
selected from a pool of applicants based on their research's promise for
cultivating dialogue, nurturing collaboration across academic disciplines,
and integrating, synthesizing, and building upon existing disciplinary
contributions to global racial justice research, broadly conceived. The
candidates will also be asked to organize programming, pedagogical and
research events to contribute to efforts by the Einaudi Center to advance
Cornell's position as a global leader in the study of identity, rights, and
equity.

The fellowship will be conferred to the selected applicant with a Ph.D.
completed within the last five years. The scholar will be housed within the
Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, working closely with the
GRJ faculty task force and GRJ graduate student fellows. While holding this
appointment, the scholar will work to generate new knowledge that addresses
key themes and concerns in this thematic priority area and contribute to
strategic planning for the future of the initiative. We are open to
research on a variety of related topics, including land/dispossession,
health and well-being, locally defined racisms, unequal justice, the role
of the police and the carceral state, accountability and policy mechanisms,
systems, structures, and institutions that perpetuate racial inequality and
violence, and applied applications toward racial healing and a more just
world. We also support public scholarship, thought leadership, exhibitions
and installations, community extension work, and advocacy campaigns for
antiracism and racial justice in education, migration and citizenship
regimes, climate and land policy, economic opportunities, food systems,
health, politics, and policing.

Many thanks and all best,
Rachel


Rachel Beatty Riedl
Director, Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies
John S. Knight Professor of International Studies
Department of Government, Cornell University
@BeattyRiedl
https://government.cornell.edu/rachel-beatty-riedl
<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https://government.cornell.edu/rachel-beatty-riedl__;!!Dq0X2DkFhyF93HkjWTBQKhk!DqMtnNVUwt2EsmjNir_QW5xcD94Gwl0hMLM9tflnXWQkHmXOiRpA_ZIlG_Feueh4mjX0T7wN7SrgMg$>

Located on the Gayogo̱hó꞉nǫʼ (Cayuga Nation) traditional homelands; this
nation is a member of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, with a historic and
contemporary presence on this land.


*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*~*

Kimberly R. Marion Suiseeya, PhD

Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science

Environmental Policy and Culture Program

Northwestern University

Website: https://sites.northwestern.edu/suiseeya/

Office Hours: https://calendly.com/kimberly-marion/




*The Northwestern campus sits on the traditional homelands of the people of
the Council of Three Fires, the Ojibwe, Potawatomi, and Odawa as well as
the Menominee, Miami and Ho-Chunk nations. It was also a site of trade,
travel, gathering and healing for more than a dozen other Native tribes and
is still home to over 100,000 tribal members in the state of Illinois. I
also recognize Northwestern University’s historical relationship with the
Cheyenne and Arapaho. These lands continue to carry the stories of these
Nations, their forced removal, and their struggles for survival and
recognition. As a scholar, I have a responsibility to acknowledge both the
Peoples as well as the histories of dispossession that have allowed for the
growth of this institution. By reflecting on these histories, I hope to
actively address the role that my university has played in shaping them. *

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