Wednesday, February 28, 2018

PhD candidate in ‘Effects of Emotional Political Communication’, Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research

PhD candidate in ‘Effects of Emotional Political Communication’

Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences – Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research

Publication date: 24 January 2018
Level of education: Master's degree
Salary indication: €2,222 to €2,840 gross per month
Closing date: 30 April 2018
Hours: 38 hours per week
Vacancy number:18-035
The Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) of the University of Amsterdam (UvA) is the largest educational and research institution in the social sciences in the Netherlands, and one of the highest-ranked such institutions in Europe. The Faculty serves 7,500 students in numerous Bachelor’s and Master’s programmes in Political Science, Sociology, Anthropology, Communication Science, Psychology, Social Geography, Planning and International Development Studies, and Educational Sciences. The academic staff is employed in education as well as research. There are over 1,100 employees at the Faculty, which resides in a number of buildings in the centre of Amsterdam.
The Department of Political Sciences is one of the departments of the FMG. The College of Social Sciences (CSW) and the Graduate School of Social Sciences (GSSS) are responsible for the under-graduate and graduate teaching programmes in Political Science. The research within the Department is conducted in research programmes of the Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR). The AISSR unites the social science research of the UvA, and is one of the largest research institutes in Europe.

Project description

You will be working for POLEMIC, a project that analyses the causes and consequences of emotional political communication. The project is highly interdisciplinary combining automated text analyses of politician speeches with individual responses to communication, both at the attitudinal and physiological level. You will be working in a team of 5 people: two PhD students (to be hired), Gijs Schumacher (Principal Investigator) and Bert Bakker. Formally, you will work at the Department of Political Science.

The PhD candidate will analyse the attitudinal and physiological responses (heartbeat, skin conductance and facial electromyography) of individuals to emotional appeals by politicians. To do this the PhD candidate needs to conduct a survey experiment and a lab experiment in different countries. The dissertation should focus on explaining who responds (emotionally) to what, and what the consequences are for political attitudes and political behaviour. In addition to that there is also ample space in the project for developing and implementing one’s own ideas, as long as these match with the broader topic of emotions in politics.
The project description of POLEMIC can be found here.

Tasks

  • Conduct survey experiments and lab experiments, including physiological measurement (skin conductance, heartbeat, EMG);
  • process and analyse survey data, including physiological data;
  • write a dissertation consisting of research articles;
  • work in a highly interdisciplinary team;
  • further develop the project using other data/methods or asking different questions;
  • engage in more methodological training, at a summer school and/or an university abroad;
  • spend one semester abroad to do a lab study in the United States (specifically Temple University in Philadelphia in the Behavioral Foundations Lab led by Prof Kevin Arceneaux);
Teaching is optional, but encouraged.

Requirements

  • Master’s degree in Political Science or a Master’s degree in a discipline relevant to the project such as Psychology or Communication Science (candidates with another Master’s degree may apply, but should motivate why their experience suffices for this project);
  • plenty of experience with conducting experiments, preferably also experiments collecting physiological data;
  • programming skills in R, Python or another programming language;
  • an interest in interdisciplinary work.

Further information

For more information please contact:
For a project description, please check:
For more information please visit: http://www.uva.nl/en/content/vacancies/2018/01/18-035-phd-candidate-in-%E2%80%98effects-of-emotional-political-communication%E2%80%99.html

Source:  http://www.uva.nl/en/home (28.02.2018)

MA, MSc, MPhil, PhD ADMISSION NOTICE FOR THE 2018–19 ACADEMIC SESSION: South Asian University, New Delhi

South Asian University, New Delhi

ADMISSION NOTICE FOR THE 2018–19 ACADEMIC SESSION

About: South Asian University (SAU) is an international university established by the governments of the eight member nations of the South Asian Association for Regional Co-operation (SAARC) viz., Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka. The University, established with the aim of evolving a South Asian consciousness, offers Master’s and PhD level programmes in Economics, Computer Science, Biotechnology, Applied Mathematics, Sociology, International Relations and Legal Studies.
SAU attracts students from all member nations and its degrees are recognized by all the eight SAARC countries.

The University currently functions from its Akbar Bhawan campus in Chanakyapuri, New Delhi. It will eventually move to its 100-acre campus in Maidan Garhi, South Delhi, which is expected to be ready by the year 2019.

http://www.sau.int/admissions/admission-notice-2018.html

Admission to Master's Level Programmes


The following is a list of the Master’s level programmes offered at SAU. The figures in brackets show the number of seats available in each programme.

Details about the faculty, admission procedure and the format of the Entrance Tests can be viewed by clicking on appropriate links below:

Course (No of Seats) Procedure & Details Sample Paper
Faculty of Mathematics and Computer Science
Department of Mathematics
MSc in Applied Mathematics (30)
Eligibility Criteria, Admission Procedure & Details of Entrance Test Download
Department of Computer Science MSc in Computer Science (30) Eligibility Criteria, Admission Procedure & Details of Entrance Test Download
Faculty of Life Sciences & Biotechnology
MSc in Biotechnology (30)
Eligibility Criteria, Admission Procedure & Details of Entrance Test Download
Faculty of Economics
MA in Economics (30)
Eligibility Criteria, Admission Procedure & Details of Entrance Test Download
Faculty of Social Sciences
Department of International Relations
MA in International Relations (30)
Eligibility Criteria, Admission Procedure & Details of Entrance Test Download
Department of Sociology
MA in Sociology (30)
Eligibility Criteria, Admission Procedure & Details of Entrance Test Download
Faculty of Legal Studies
LLM (Master of Laws) (30)
Eligibility Criteria, Admission Procedure & Details of Entrance Test Download

For More Info please visit: http://www.sau.int/admissions/admission-notice-2018.html

Source: http://www.sau.int (28.02.2018)

Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Top professionals for trustworthy information revealed [Librarians in top five professional groups for trustworthy information]

Top professionals for trustworthy information revealed

[Librarians in top five professional groups for trustworthy information]


According to a YouGov poll commissioned by CILIP, the library and information association, LIBRARIANS are in the FOURTH  place (in the top five) of professional groups the public believe are most likely to provide trustworthy information. 

A YouGov poll commissioned by CILIP, the library and information association, has revealed the professionals the public believe are most likely to provide trustworthy information.

Medical staff topped a list of ten professional groups with 74% of British adults saying they would provide trustworthy information, followed by teachers and police officers (both at 49%), librarians (46%) and lawyers (39%). Bottom of the list were politicians, with 2% of respondents saying they would provide trustworthy information.

The public poll reveals that has never been more important to find trusted information in order to make good, evidence-based decisions, yet it has never been more difficult. The vast majority of respondents agreed they trust information more when it’s from a professional. The YouGov poll of 2,000 adults in Great Britain shows:

66% agree that it is harder than ever to find trustworthy information.
84% agree that they trust information more when it is given by a professional.
90% agree that it is important to educate people on how to find trustworthy information.
Librarians were in the top five trusted professional groups out of the 10 tested, with 46% of adults saying they would provide trustworthy information. 

For More Information: https://www.cilip.org.uk/page/trusted
Source: https://www.cilip.org.uk/page/trusted (27.02.2018)

Centre for Public Policy hosts the XIX International Conference on Public Policy & Management on 27 – 29, August 2024

Centre for Public Policy hosts the XIX International Conference on Public Policy & Management on 27 – 29, August 2024 The Centre for Pub...