Aarhus University, Department of Anthropology
Associate Professorship in Anthropology 1008581
Institution Type: | College / University |
Location: | Denmark |
Position: | Associate Professor |
The Department of Anthropology, part of the larger School of Culture and Society, invites applications for the position of associate professor of anthropology. The associate professorship is a permanent, full-time position, commencing on 1 April 2019 or as soon as possible thereafter.
The application deadline is 29 November 2018.
Place of employment: Moesgaard, Moesgaard Allé, 8270 Højbjerg, Denmark
Job description
We are looking for a colleague who is able to contribute to the further development of the department’s thriving research and educational environments by either strengthening its existing foci (see below) or expanding its profile in new directions. We are looking for a candidate with a strong understanding of, and training within, the general field of social/cultural anthropology. We are looking for applicants with excellent and well-documented core anthropological research credentials, including experience and expertise gained through long-term ethnographic fieldwork, an outstanding publication record, and a documented ability to attract external funding and nurture international collaboration. The position is open in terms of regional and thematic specialisations.
The successful applicant will be responsible for planning, developing and teaching anthropology at BA, MA and PhD level, as well as possibly contributing to the department’s Master’s programme in human security. The successful applicant must be able to teach general courses in anthropology (see language requirements/expectations below). We emphasise the importance of maintaining a dedicated and respectful relationship between staff and students, so the ideal candidate should be able to demonstrate and exemplify their commitment to participatory teaching initiatives and student involvement as part of their teaching portfolio.
We are particularly keen to continue to develop the department’s profile in pushing the barriers and conventions of the anthropological discipline through alternative and experimental ways of conducting ethnographic research, teaching, and ways of engaging with partners outside academia. We invite applicants to describe their visions and document their contributions within these areas.
Qualifications
Applicants must hold a PhD or its equivalent in social/cultural anthropology as well as having documented teaching qualifications equivalent to those acquired through an assistant professorship. They must also be able to document the following:
- Relevant academic publications at the highest international level
- Solid ethnographic fieldwork experience
- Experience of active participation in international research collaboration
- Experience of research organisation, including the obtaining and administration of external funding
- Strong teaching competences and experience of supervising at MA level
- A commitment to teaching development, the supervision of student projects and talent development.
Please note that applications which do not include samples of publications (maximum eight) will not be considered.
Language
At the Department of Anthropology, Bachelor’s courses are generally taught in Danish, while most courses on Master’s programmes are taught in English. Applicants must be able to teach and supervise in English at university level.
If the successful applicant is not fluent in Danish, he or she will be expected to acquire the language within a period of approximately three years, to a level sufficient to commence teaching and supervising in Danish.
Applications must be uploaded in English.
For further information about the position, please contact Mads Daugbjerg, Head of the Department of Anthropology (mads.daugbjerg@cas.au.dk)
For further information about the application, please contact HR supporter Marianne Birn, mbb@au.dk
The Department of Anthropology
The Department of Anthropology, one of seven departments comprising the School of Culture and Society, is among the largest and strongest academic environments within its field in Europe. Its scientific staff consists of around 20 tenured full and associate professors, 10-15 assistant professors and post-doctoral fellows, and a cohort of more than 40 PhD students. More than 500 Bachelor’s and Master’s students are enrolled in the department’s teaching programmes at any given time. The department has a strong international profile, attracting visiting researchers, fellows and students from across the world.
The department’s researchers are committed to the anthropological tradition that combines rich empirical research based on ethnographic fieldwork with theoretically based historical and comparative studies. Its core research encompasses broad cross-disciplinary work on theories about what it means to be human, detailed methodological reflections on the basic conditions and current challenges of fieldwork, thorough engagement with specific regional and thematic problems, and continuing experiments with anthropological forms of representation. Regionally, the department’s expertise extends throughout most geographical areas of the world. Its researchers are engaged on all continents, with a particularly substantial strength in Southern and South-East Asia, combined with a strong ethnographic commitment to Denmark and Danish society. Thematically, the department is no less diverse, with a history of research clusters within the anthropology of politics, religion, modernity and medicine having been reinforced, in recent years, by new research foci such as land and border conflicts, migration and mobility, urbanism, design and planning, environmental and multi-species ethnography, heritage and memory, as well as visual anthropology and experimental methodologies.
The department’s teaching programmes offer first-rate training in theory, data collection and analysis, combined with a strong emphasis on learning through fieldwork practice and other ways of external engagement, including corporate and governmental contexts. We offer Bachelor’s and Master’s degree programmes in anthropology as well as an interdisciplinary, English-language Master’s programme in human security, supplementary (minor) programmes in anthropology and sociology, and a Danish-language, part-time Master’s degree programme in health anthropology designed for healthcare professionals. As part of their Master’s degree programme in anthropology, students choose a track specialisation in general, visual or medical anthropology, preparing them for field studies and thesis writing within these areas. Likewise, our human security students engage with international partners such as NGOs in analysing and addressing security-related challenges across the globe. Our close relationship with the adjacent Moesgaard Museum and its staff – some of whom hold positions shared between the university and the museum – provides students and staff with opportunities for creating exhibitions or otherwise engaging in research communication with the general public.
The School of Culture and Society
At the School of Culture and Society, the object of research and teaching is the interplay between culture and society in time and space:
- From the traditional disciplines of the humanities and theology to applied social research
- From Antiquity to the issues facing contemporary societies
- From familiar Danish cultural forms to other very different worlds
- From local questions to global challenges.
The school’s ambition is to produce compelling research with an international resonance, as well as offering teaching and talent development of the highest quality. The school has a broad cooperative interface with society as a whole, both in Denmark and abroad, and contributes to social innovation, research communication and further and continuing education.
For further information about the school, please see http://cas.au.dk/en/.
Qualification requirements
Applicants should hold a PhD or equivalent academic qualifications.
Formalities
- Faculty of Arts refers to the Ministerial Order on the Appointment of Academic Staff at Danish Universities (the Appointment Order).
- Appointment shall be in accordance with the collective labour agreement between the Danish Ministry of Finance and the Danish Confederation of Professional Associations .
- Further information on qualification requirements and job content may be found in the Memorandum on Job Structure for Academic Staff at Danish Universities .
- Further information on the application and supplementary materials may be found in Applicant Guidelines.
- The application must outline the applicant's motivation for applying for the position, attaching a curriculum vitae, a teaching portfolio, a complete list of published works, copies of degree certificates and no more than eight examples of academic production (mandatory). Please upload this material electronically along with your application.
If nothing else is noted, applications must be submitted in English. Application deadline is at 11.59 pm Danish time (same as Central European Time) on the deadline day.
All interested candidates are encouraged to apply, regardless of their personal background.
Shortlists may be prepared with the candidates that have been selected for a detailed academic assessment. A committee set up by the head of school is responsible for selecting the most qualified candidates. See this link for further information about shortlisting at the Faculty of Arts: http://medarbejdere.au.dk/fileadmin/user_upload/Proces_for_shortlisting_december_2017.pdf
Deadline
All applications must be made online and received by 29 November 2018.
Faculty of Arts
The Faculty of Arts is one of four main academic areas at Aarhus University.
The faculty contributes to Aarhus University's research, talent development, knowledge exchange and degree programmes.
With its 500 academic staff members, 260 PhD students, 10,500 BA and MA students, and 1,500 students following continuing/further education programmes, the faculty constitutes a strong and diverse research and teaching environment.
The Faculty of Arts consists of the School of Communication and Culture, the School of Culture and Society, the Danish School of Education, and the Centre for Teaching Development and Digital Media. Each of these units has strong academic environments and forms the basis for interdisciplinary research and education.
The faculty's academic environments and degree programmes engage in international collaboration and share the common goal of contributing to the development of knowledge, welfare and culture in interaction with society.
Read more at arts.au.dk/en
Aarhus University offers Relocation service to International researchers. You can read more about it at au.dk/work/en
Aarhus University is an academically diverse and research-intensive university with a strong commitment to high-quality research and education and the development of society nationally and globally. The university offers an inspiring research and teaching environment to its 39,000 students and 8,000 employees, and has an annual budget of EUR 884 million Learn more at www.au.dk/en.
Contact: |
For further information about the position, please contact Mads Daugbjerg, Head of the Department of Anthropology (mads.daugbjerg@cas.au.dk) |
Website: | http://arts.au.dk/en |
Primary Category: | Anthropology |
Secondary Categories: | Cultural History / Studies Social Sciences |
Posting Date: | 10/09/2018 |
Closing Date | 11/29/2018 |