Challenging Inequalities: Retreat organized by the Swiss Young Academy

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Event details

Date 13.09.2021 15.09.2021
Location
Category Conferences - Seminars
Creating space for First-gen/BIPOC/Jewish/Migrant Early Career Researchers

Early Career Researchers (ECRs) who are part of socially marginalized groups have been identified as particularly vulnerable to the logics of the neoliberal university as they additionally face discrimination. The three-day retreat invites ECRs who identify as first generation academics and/or Black/Indigenous/People of Colour/Jewish/Migrants to co-create a transformative space where participants can openly talk about their experiences, debate institutional politics, foster solidarity, and build mentoring relationships. 
 
Collectively, we will identify systemic obstacles, which should be addressed institutionally so that inequalities and precarity in Swiss academia can be combated.
 
You can participate if you are a PhD student or postdoc affiliated with a Swiss academic institution, and self-identify as first-generation academics and/or BIPOC/Jewish/Migrant.
The participation will be free of charge and accommodation and travel will be provided. Although the main language of the retreat will be English, we do not expect a perfect mastery of English, and ad hoc support will be provided.
 
The retreat will be facilitated by a wide range of experts, including senior scholars and academia-adjacent professionals from different disciplines who themselves identify as first-generation and/or BIPOC/Jewish/Migrant.
 
If you are interested, please sign up at https://forms.gle/Qe3Adg7VqXr3x95P9. (deadline July 15)

Practical information

  • Informed public
  • Free

Organizer

  • Stefanie Boulila (Lecturer and project manager at Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts), Alexandre Bovet (Postdoctoral Research Associate at University of Oxford), Estefania Cuero (PhD candidate at University of Lucerne), Anna Jobin (Senior Researcher at Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society, Berlin), Robbie l‘Anson Price (University of Geneva), Gustavo Ruiz Buendía (Bioinformatician at the Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics)

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