A comment to evalatuion of the three Swedish Centres of Gender Excellence
GEXcel news
The Swedish Research Council’s investment in gender research
October 26 | 0 comments
International Conference: Gender Paradoxes in Academic and Scientific Organisation(s) – Change, Excellence and Interventions
September 07 | 0 comments
20-21 October 2011 at Örebro University, Forum House, Bio.
GEXcel evaluated
September 15 | 0 comments
Accommodation
September 09 | 0 comments
Conference call: Gender Paradoxes of Changing Academic and Scientific Organisation(s)
June 17 | 0 comments
CALL FOR PAPERS AND PARTICIPATION
GEXcel Theme 11-12, Gender Paradoxes of Changing Academic and Scientific Organisation(s), invites scholars, at all career stages, to apply for a workshop conference in October 20-21, 2011 at Örebro University, Sweden.
Conference launching GEXcel Theme 11-12: Gender Paradoxes in Changing Academic and Scientific Organisation(s)
April 28 | 0 comments
Launching GEXcel Theme 11-12: GEXcel Conference Gender Paradoxes in Changing Academic and Scientific Organisation(s), at Örebro University, FORUM house, Bio, May 16, 2011 at 10-17. Participation is free but participants need to register before May 9 by email to Mia Fogel, mia.fogel@oru.se. Inquiries: Liisa Husu, liisa.husu@oru.se.
Fellows for Theme 11-12 selected
April 13 | 0 comments
Visiting Fellows for GEXcel Theme 11-12, Gender Paradoxes in Changing Academic and Scientific Organisation(s), have now been selected.
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(What's this?)Hohman, Kathryn, PhD student
By Katherine Harrison on 11 May | 0 comments
GEXcel project:
Utilizing a case study of post-revolutionary Nepal, specifically focused on female combatants in the Maoist People’s Liberation Army (PLA), I work to draw out an iteration of political power effects—gendered, raced, classed-- produced by the intersection of ideology and militarization. Specifically, I am interested in the regulation of bodies according to the historically specific notions of “morality” and “nation” and the friction produced by the competing goals of “scienticized” sexual health intervention(s), as designed by international development agencies. The complex realm that occupies the space between the dehistoricized, apolitical, morally neutral body assumed by science and the constellation of meanings and experiences that variously inhabit a female combatant is a prosperous site for exploring, in-depth, the overlap between science, sexuality, sexual health, embodiment, empowerment and political ideology.
Biographical notes:
Kathryn Hohman is currently pursuing a PhD in Development Studies from SOAS, University of London. Her research focuses on 'post'-conflict in Nepal--specifically the intersections of ethnicity, nationalism, and gender. Ms. Hohman has a Master's degree in Women's Studies with a concentration in the Anthropology of Development from The George Washington University in Washington, DC. Previously, she worked for the INGO Women for Women International in both their Washington, DC and London offices.




