Childhood Studies, Rutgers-Camden, now accepting applications for graduate study for 2015; funding available

Applications now being sought for Ph.D. and MA programs. Ph.D. application deadline: January 5, 2015. Funding available.
http://childhood.camden.rutgers.edu/2013/06/07/applications/

The Department of Childhood Studies at Rutgers University in Camden, New Jersey USA (http://childhood.camden.rutgers.edu/), opened its doors in September 2007 as the first Ph.D. granting program in Childhood Studies in North America. In addition to the Ph.D., the multidisciplinary program offers BA and MA degrees. Graduate students in the program (http://childhood.camden.rutgers.edu/graduate-program/graduate-students/), come from a variety of backgrounds and bring with them an impressive array of educational and life experience. The Masters of Art program continues to grow and produce new and innovative leaders in their field.

With three new full-time faculty joining the Department in Fall 2014(http://childhood.camden.rutgers.edu/2014/03/24/new-faculty-members/), the program is poised to bring innovation and growth to the already vibrant department and field of childhood studies (http://childhood.camden.rutgers.edu/faculty/).
Applications are now being accepted for the Fall 2015 entering doctoral class; applications for the Masters of Arts program are accepted year-round.Deadline for applications for doctoral study is January 5, 2014Funding is available on a competitive basis for qualified applicants .

Visit the Graduate Admissions website http://gradstudy.rutgers.edu/

Childhood Studies, Rutgers-Camden, welcomes 3 new faculty members in 2014

The Department of Childhood Studies, Rutgers University—Camden, New Jersey,  USA, http://childhood.camden.rutgers.edu/  is excited to welcome three new full-time faculty members to the program, beginning in Fall 2015, who will build upon and extend an already vibrant program in the interdisciplinary study of childhood and children’s lives http://childhood.camden.rutgers.edu/2014/03/24/new-faculty-members/.

·        Sarada Balagopalan, PhD International Education, Department of Teaching and Learning, New York University. Dr. Balagopalan joins the department as Associate Professor from the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies in New Delhi. Her work on postcolonial childhoods foregrounds the tension between children’s work and schooling as a key site where discourses of colonial modernity, the ‘developmental’ nation-state, late capitalism and current transnational efforts around children’s rights play out. One of the founding editors of  contemporary Education Dialogue, Dr. Balagopalan has published widely on pedagogy, ethnography, globalisation and feminism. Her book,Inhabiting ‘Childhood’: Children, Labour and Schooling in Postcolonial India(Palgrave), is forthcoming in 2014.
·        Meredith Bak, PhD in Film and Media Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara. Dr. Bak examines the relationship between children and new media from the nineteenth century to the present. She is at work on a book manuscript examining the role of pre-cinematic visual media in cultivating children as modern media spectators, Her work has been published in Early Popular Visual Culture and is forthcoming in Theory of Science. She joins the department as Assistant Professor from Franklin & Marshall College. Before completing her PhD, Dr. Bak worked in museum education and as a teaching artist in New York City public schools.
·        Kate Cairns, PhD in Sociology and Equity Studies, University of Toronto. Dr. Cairns joins the department as an Assistant Professor after completing a Postdoctoral Fellowship in the Department of Sociology at the University of Toronto. Her research explores the interplay between discursive constructions of youth and childhood and young people’s subjectivity formation focusing on the way that children and youth are constructed as the promise of collective futures. Combining insights from education, feminist theory, cultural studies, and cultural geography, Dr. Cairns has published widely on schooling, arts education, food and consumption in venues such as Ethnography and Education, Journal of Consumer Culture, Gender and Education.

International Forum on Intercountry Adoption and Global Surrogacy, 11-13 August, The Hague

The International Institute of Social Studies will be hosting an International Forum on Intercountry Adoption and Global Surrogacy 11-13 August 2014 in The Hague, Netherlands. Please visit www.iss.nl/adoption_surrogacy for general information.

There is still limited space available in select thematic areas. More information is available about each thematic area on the About the Forum page. If you are interested in participating, please contact the appropriate thematic chair directly before June 30th.

CFP: Childhood and Popular Culture, live and online!

The Children and Childhood Studies Area of the Mid-Atlantic Popular and American Culture Association is accepting submissions for our 25th Annual Conference until June 15. We are seeking papers, panels, roundtables and other formats on any topic at the convergence of childhood and popular culture. Please see our full CFP for more info.

Can’t make it to Baltimore in November? You can still participate via our online collaboration with H-PCAACA, “American Childhood in 25 Artifacts.” Let’s do a little digital scholarship! Please submit your artifact for this collection by Oct 10.

Forthcoming book: Child Labour in Global Society

Child Labour in Global Society, by Paul Close
Bingley: Emerald Group
June 2014 (ISBN 978-1-78350-779-5);

http://books.emeraldinsight.com/

Child Labour in Global Society is a critical response to the modern
educational regime, compulsory schooling and the ‘slavery industry’ in a
globalizing world; to evolving and exploitative notions of ‘slavery’; to
definitions of ‘slavery’ in international law; to approaches to ‘educational
labour’, including in international human rights law; and to cultural,
common-sense and professional perspectives on ‘slavery’ and ‘educational
labour’, in the light of which it is arguable that children’s ‘slave labour’
in modern and modernizing societies is grossly under-estimated and otherwise
greatly, if conveniently, misrepresented.

CFP: The Child in Media

Red Feather Journal (www.redfeatherjournal.org), an online, peer-reviewed,
international and interdisciplinary journal of the child image, seeks
submissions for the Fall 2014 issue (deadline September 15th, 2014).

Red Feather Journal seeks well-written, critical articles on any aspect of
the child image or image of childhood. The journal welcomes submissions that
examine a broad range of media:  film, Television, the Internet, print
resources, art, or any other visual medium.  Some sample topics include, but
are certainly not limited to:  studies of images of children of color; child
as commodity; images of children in international films; political uses of
the child image; children in advertising; childhood as myth, visual
adaptations of children¹s literary works; child welfare images; images of
children and/in war or conflict; the child image in video games; images of
children and material culture; or any other critical examination of the
child image, or childhood, in a variety of visual mediums.  Red Feather
Journal welcomes international submissions.

Red Feather Journal will also consider submissions of tasteful photo essays
or artistic works. Copyright information, including permission for use of
each image, must be included with the submission. Red Feather will not use
any image without the express written consent of its copyright holder.

Submissions to Red Feather Journal are accepted on a rolling basis. Red
Feather Journal is published twice a year and adheres to the MLA citation
system. Authors are welcome to submit articles in other citations systems,
with the understanding that, upon acceptance, conversion to MLA is a
condition of publication. Red Feather Journal is indexed through EBSCO host
and MLA bibliography.

Interested contributors please submit the paper, an abstract, and a brief
biography (with full contact information) as attachments in Word to
debbieo@okstate.edu

Deadline for submissions for the Fall 2014 issue is September 15th, 2014.