Instructor, Assistant, Associate or Full Professor - Halifax, Canada - Dalhousie University

Dalhousie University
Dalhousie University
Verified Company
Halifax, Canada

1 week ago

Sophia Lee

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Sophia Lee

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Description

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Position Details:


  • Position Information
    Position Title
  • Instructor, Assistant, Associate or Full Professor of Science

Posting Number

  • F427P

Type of position

  • Tenure Stream

Department/Unit

  • Science
  • Dean's Office

Location

  • Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

About the opportunity-This opportunity is part of a cluster hiring initiative supported by the Dalhousie Diversity Faculty Award (DDFA) program. In keeping with the principles of employment equity, the DDFA program aims to correct historic underrepresentation. This initiative will support inclusive excellence by appointing five Black scholars to the university across multiple disciplines. Cluster hires promote interdisciplinary collaboration, while creating communities of support for scholars from underrepresented groups. These new scholars will find opportunities for scholarly contributions, collaboration, and support as Fellows of the newly established Black Studies Research Institute (BSRI) and will contribute to our emerging transdisciplinary program in Black and African Diaspora Studies (BAFD).
Further information about this initiative may be found here-
substantial start-up and longer-term resources to support their work.

  • The Faculty of Science is the largest at the university, and values strong teaching, outreach, and research.
Over 250 faculty and staff members are spread across our 19 programs, eight departments and dozens of research units. Our faculty and staff members deliver some of the best science programs in Canada.
Information about the Faculty of Science may be found here:

Dalhousie University is located in Nova Scotia, Canada (Mi'kma'ki) with four campuses in Halifax and Truro, and satellite locations in Yarmouth and Saint John, New Brunswick.

As Atlantic Canada's primary research-intensive university and a member of the U15 Group of Canadian Universities, our 13 academic Faculties expand understanding through teaching excellence and a drive for discovery that results in more than $214 million in research funding each year.

Each year, Dalhousie welcomes almost 21,000 students from more than 115 countries around the world.

A diverse population of Black students call Dalhousie home, including those from African Nova Scotian, Black/African Canadian, and international communities.

The United Nations recognized African Canadians as a distinct group and Dalhousie acknowledges African Nova Scotians as a distinct people who have shaped the province and the university for centuries.

In 2018, Dalhousie launched the

African Nova Scotian Strategy, which was then further updated in 2021 through the work of the strategy's working group, which includes Dalhousie's Director of African Nova Scotian Community Engagement. The Strategy is aimed at ensuring sustainable initiatives that support African Nova Scotian students, staff, and faculty members.
Dalhousie has a strong history of introducing ground-breaking initiatives that have created many opportunities for Black students including the

Indigenous Blacks & Mi'kmaq Initiative at the Schulich School of Law and

Promoting Leadership in Health for African Nova Scotians program. The university has also developed strong ties to several organizations serving that community, for example to the African Canadian Services Branch of the Department of Education - the only such branch in Canada serving Black students in K-12, to the Delmore Buddy Daye Learning Institute and to the Afrocentric Math cohort at Auburn High school.
In 1970, Dalhousie established the

Transition year Program (

TYP

), which provides opportunities for individuals who may face barriers to post-secondary education to prepare for all aspects of academic life and gain access to the university. Nearly two decades ago,

Imhotep's Legacy Academy was established, an innovative university-community partnership designed to create pathways into STEM for students of African descent.
Dalhousie established the

James R. Johnston (

JRJ

) Chair in Black Canadian Studies in 1991 which was at the time, the only endowed Black Studies Chair at a Canadian university. The current Chair, Dr. OmiSoore Dryden, recently established the

Black Studies Research Institute (

BSRI

), a pan-university institute centering transdisciplinary and interdisciplinary research in Black studies. The BSRI will intersect closely with the university's minor in Black and African Diaspora Studies, developed by former JRJ Chair Dr. Afua Cooper, and the university is now working on a proposal for a full degree program, the development of which is being championed by members of Dalhousie's

Black Faculty and Staff Caucus and supported by senior leaders across the university.
Dalhousie was also the first in Canada to join the Universities Studying Slavery group of institutions, out of which the
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