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[Commlist] Call for Visiting Lecturers: Media and Peace MA Program at University for Peace
Sat Feb 02 07:50:48 GMT 2019
*Call for Visiting Lecturers: Media and Peace MA Program at University
for Peace*
**
The University for Peace, established by the General Assembly of the
United Nations, located in San Jose, Costa Rica is seeking visiting
lecturers to teach courses within the MA in Media and Peace program of
the Department of Peace and Conflict Studies for the academic year
2019-2020. Visiting lecturer-ships are available for the following
courses and will be held on the dates mentioned below.
*Introduction to Media and Peace*: 30 October-19 November 2019
*Global Structures and Cultures, Media and Conflict: *25 November-13
December 2019
*Censorship, International Law and Media *13-31 January 2020
*Conflict, Media Technoculture and Peace: *3-21 February 2020
*Culture Wars, Peacebuilding and Media Representations: *15 April-05 May
2020
**
For detailed description of the courses, see further below.
Appointment will be on the basis of a short-term, full-time contract for
the three-week duration of the courses. The University for Peace will
cover the financial costs of your travel: ticket in economy class, hotel
accommodations and a daily allowance amount of US$55.00**to cover meals,
personal transportation and miscellaneous expenses. The honorarium for
the course will be US$4,500.00. Please be aware that in accordance with
the Income Tax Law of the Republic of Costa Rica, the UPEACE will
withhold from the amount to be paid (US$4,500.00) 15% (fifteen percent).
Interested applicants are requested to review the attached course
descriptions and determine the course for which they want to be
considered as a lecturer based on their relevant academic expertise
and/or equivalent professional experience. They are then invited to
apply for the positions to the following persons (copying both):
Dr. Saumava Mitra
Coordinator, MA in Media and Peace
(smitra /at/ upeace.org) <mailto:(smitra /at/ upeace.org)>
Dr. Heather Kertyzia
Head, Department of Peace and Conflict Studies
(hkertyzia /at/ upeace.org) <mailto:(hkertyzia /at/ upeace.org)>
Emailed applications must include *1) a detailed curriculum vitae* (Max.
5 Pages) and *2) a cover letter* mentioning which course the applicant
is applying to teach, and describing briefly how their relevant
experience and expertise in the topic area makes them a suitable
candidate (Max. 2 Pages). *3)* *a teaching statement* which clearly
states examples of pedagogy as they might be used in the course (Max. 2
pages). Please include the words *‘UPEACE Media Visiting Lecturer’* in
the subject line of the email. Successful applicants will demonstrate
exceptional research and pedagogic expertise in the topic area of the
relevant course and/or up-to-date outstanding practical and training
experience in the intersectional area of Media and Peacebuilding.
Emailed applications must reach by *11: 59 PM Central Standard Time,*
*February 28 2019*.
*About the Department*: The Department of Peace and Conflict Studies of
the University for Peace offers a range of postgraduate programs in the
areas of peacebuilding and conflict transformation, gender studies and
peace education. Since its inception in 1980, it has also been home to
cutting edge research and pedagogy at the cross-disciplinary area of
Media and Communication Studies and Peace and Conflict Studies. In the
academic year 2019-2020, the department is re-launching its MA in Media
and Peace as a full-fledged postgraduate program. This program is a
revitalization of the MA in Media, Peace and Conflict that was
previously offered by the department and extends the current
Specialization in Media, Peace and Conflict offered within the MA in
Peace and Conflict Studies program. For more information see
www.upeace.org <http://www.upeace.org>.
*About the University*: The University for Peace is renowned for its
globally inclusive research and pedagogy in the broad area of Peace and
Conflict. Home to the departments of Peace and Conflict Studies,
Environment and Development, and International Law, it attracts a global
body of students drawn from every continent of the earth every year. The
University was established as a Treaty Organization of the United
Nations with its own Charter in an International Agreement adopted by
the General Assembly in Resolution 35/55 in December 1980. Its mission
is "to provide humanity with an international institution of higher
education for peace and with the aim of promoting, among all human
beings, the spirit of understanding, tolerance and peaceful coexistence,
to stimulate cooperation among peoples and to help lessen obstacles and
threats to world peace and progress, in keeping with the noble
aspirations proclaimed in the Charter of the United Nations". For more
information see www.upeace.org <http://www.upeace.org>.
*For informal inquiries*about the visiting lecturer-ships, contact the
program coordinator at (smitra /at/ upeace.org) <mailto:(smitra /at/ upeace.org)>
*University for Peace Media and Peace MA 2019-2020: Courses open for
visiting lecturers*
The list below outlines the five courses of the Media and Peace MA
Program for which we are seeking visiting lecturers. Dates when the
courses will be held are mentioned in brackets beside the title of the
course. Applicants are requested to kindly make sure that they are
available to travel to Costa Rica and teach these courses on these dates
before applying as dates of the courses are non-negotiable and
re-scheduling is not possible. MA courses offered at UPEACE are
intensive and consist of five three-hour sessions per week during the
three week period. Typically, final assignments by the students are due
within the course period or shortly thereafter.
**
*Introduction to Media and Peace*[30 October -19 November 2019]
This course will draw on theories and prior knowledge from both Media
and Communication studies and Peace and Conflict Studies to identify the
areas where ideas, concepts, theories and practices of the two
disciplines merge and can help augment each other. It will particularly
aim to provide students with a clear understanding of how media and
conflict, communication and peace, are inter-related with each other. It
will also apply this knowledge through student-led analysis of real
world examples of contemporary conflicts and peacebuilding efforts. The
course will ideally culminate in student projects of case study analyses
of media’s role in a particular conflict-affected context or type of
social conflict.
*Global Structures and Cultures, Media and Conflict *[25 Nov-13 Dec 2019]
This course will build a critical understanding of how
political-economic and socio-cultural inequities in the macro structures
that govern media in today’s globalized world, form obstacles to peace,
and fuel conflict in and between societies. Including the influential
and still-relevant debate surrounding the New World Information and
Communication Order (1980) of the UN General Assembly, this course will
focus on the continuities and changes before and since in the political
and economic structures that underlie global media. It will focus on
understanding how globalization, media structures and contemporary
conflicts are inter-related and influence each other. A special focus
within this broader discussions will be to create understanding of what
role news media and journalism has traditionally played in reporting and
representing conflict in ways that have been detrimental to
peace-related goals of the international community. **
**
**
*Censorship, International Law and Media *[13-31 January 2020]**
**
Taking advantage of synergies between the fields of International Law
and Human Rights on one hand, and Media and Peace on the other, this
course will offer a critical analysis of the relationship between law
and media around the world. It will include topics such as legal and
illegal censorship of news and other media in different national
contexts, as well as the international rights to communication and
freedom of expression, enshrined in regional and international legal
frameworks. Specific sessions will describe how national and
international media-related legal structures and policies can encourage
or discourage processes of conflict transformation, peacebuilding, and
humanitarian advocacy.
*Conflict, Media Technoculture and Peace *[3-21 Feb 2020]
This course will focus on the emerging techno-cultural forces in the
‘new’ digital media environment and relate these to issues of
peacebuilding and conflict transformation. It will focus on citizen
journalism as well as other user-generated content to explore how
conditions of peace and conflict can be affected by them in different
contexts. These intersections between ‘new media’ and peace will include
discussions of privacy and surveillance in an online environment,
cyber-wars and cyber-terrorism on the one hand and potentials for global
civic engagement and empowerment of the dis-enfranchised through digital
media tools and platforms, on the other. Ideally, the students will be
encouraged to build their own digital media-based communication product
aimed for conflict transformation or social justice as the final student
project for this course, with the option to instead critically analyze
existing examples of digital platforms and communications from a
peacebuilding perspective.
**
*Culture Wars, Peacebuilding and Media Representations *[15 Apr-05 May 2020]
The course will focus on introducing students to the theories of
critical cultural studies and identity politics as it applies to media
representations of peacebuilding processes and contemporary conflicts.
The course will focus on existing research and real-world examples to
show how different types of media, can perpetuate conflicts in societies
and between societies through visual and textual representations that
underscore racial, gender-related and cultural differences. It will also
build critical knowledge of how media is currently used in humanitarian
communication that aims to bring down boundaries between groups with
different identities and how it can be improved for peacebuilding
purposes. Ideally, the course will culminate in a choice for students to
critically analyze a humanitarian campaign or to create a media campaign
for a humanitarian purpose, of their choice.
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