The Max-Planck Institute for Human Development (Max Planck Institut für Bildungsforschung) Center for the History of Emotions, in Berlin, are calling for research proposals for a programme of enquiry into the history of emotion in law.
Looks fascinating!
See http:\\www.csel.org.uk/resource/max planck ad Law Emotions cfa.pdf for details and how to apply.
Closing date 13th Oct.
13 September 2013
20 August 2013
CSEL Needs a Research & Communications Assistant
We're recruiting!
As
part of the Evidence into Practice project, funded by Comic Relief, we are
taking on a part-time Research and
Communications Assistant to help the EiP project manager implement CSEL’s
communications strategy and communications plan.
The
RCA will work be responsible for carrying out clearly defined communications
and research tasks aimed at promoting the organisation and its work to key
target audiences, to increase awareness of CSEL’s research and dissemination
work, and take-up of our training and consultancy services. To get the most out
of this job you will an interest in human rights and justice, proven research
skills, an ability to write for and use new media, and an ability to represent
CSEL to external organisations and partners.
Please
note, this is NOT a campaigning role: CSEL is not a campaigning organisation
and does not carry out campaigning or lobbying activities. Our academic
independence is vital to ensure our research is seen as credible by all
relevant audiences.
We
think the job will suit a recent graduate or post-graduate with the relevant
skills.
We’re particularly interested in receiving applications from candidates
with experience of working with, and the ability to communicate with, people
from different cultural backgrounds, including refugees and asylum seekers.
Applications
must be received by 5pm on 16 September
2013.
The
post is fixed-term to September
2015.
Clare
Cochrane, the EiP project manager, is available to talk about the role on 27
& 28 August and 4 September, on 07851 767 974.
6 August 2013
Post-doctoral Child Psychology Researcher & Trainer
Recruiting for this post is now closed. We will post more information here soon about our work on psychological issues for children seeking asylum.
This is an unique opportunity to lead a research
and dissemination project at the Centre for the Study of Emotion and Law in
conjunction with the United Nations High Commission for Refugees (UNHCR) and
the Hungarian Helsinki Committee (HHC).
Following the recent CREDO project which reported
on decision-making about adults seeking asylum in Europe (see Beyond Proof), UNHCR
are collaborating with the Hungarian Helsinki Committee to review decision making
across European states about children seeking asylum. The project is part-funding the Centre for the
Study of Emotion and Law to review psychological literature pertaining to
children seeking asylum, feeding into their final reports and training
material. The post-doc will make a
substantial contribution to the write-up and analysis of the relevant empirical
literature and theory. The written work will result in a publication in a peer
reviewed scientific journal, chapters in the UNHCR final project report, a
chapter in a training manual for decision makers, and the delivery of training
to immigration judges in Italy and Bulgaria.
The post is for 12-18 months and the
researcher would be responsible for an in-depth review of the
empirical work and for providing
expertise on children in the asylum process.
There will be ample prospects for identifying further primary research
and you will be supported in applying for funding to extend the post and to
engage in further research and dissemination.
You must have a DClinPsych or PhD in
clinical psychology or developmental psychology with a proven special interest
in children. You should also have some experience of training and presentation.
Existing knowledge of the issues facing
children seeking asylum would be an advantage.
If you are interested in applying and meet
the criteria above, please contact Dr. Jane Herlihy for more details and how to
apply: j.herlihy@csel.org.uk
or call 07939 151557.
(Fixed term for 12-18 months part time)
Salary: £24,000 pro rata
Expected start date: 01 October 2013
Closing date for applications: 12 August
2013
Date for interviews: 5th September 2013
26 June 2013
CSEL training at ILPA with Raggi Kotak
Jane Herlihy and Raggi Kotak, of 1, Pump Court, will be providing a 3 hour CPD accredited training on Psychological Factors in Credibility Assessments of Asylum Seekers at ILPA, on Tuesday, October 29th.
See here for more details and booking.
See here for more details and booking.
3 April 2013
CSEL boosting the development of Emotion & Law studies
Last week Jane went to a groundbreaking European meeting of emotion and law scholars at Queens University, Belfast, shaped by the thinking of Terry Maroney of Vanderbilt University, Kathy Abrams of University of California, Berkeley and organised by John Stannard and Heather Conway of QUB. Emotion and law studies have been developing for some years in the US, and now the growth of the field is gathering pace on this side of the Atlantic too – and we’re excited that CSEL is playing a part in this.
The meeting heard a wide variety of presentations about the intersections of law and emotion, including emotion in recourse to law (e.g. the immigrant justice movement in the US, or the settlement of wills and estate between siblings); emotion in the processes of law (e.g. the role of Judges’ anger in judicial decision making) and emotion in the outcome of legal processes (e.g. the effects of custodial remand, victims’ rights). We also had some excellent framing presentations on the history of thought about emotion and approaches to the study of emotion and law.
Now those of us involved in the meeting are looking at how we can take our work together forward, starting with exchanges of ideas and methodology from our different disciplines.
Some of the group have also contributed to a special edition of the Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly, due out soon. We’ll post a summary and link here as soon as it’s out.
For further developments, watch this space – keep an eye on the CSEL website as we pull together resources and materials to further the study of emotion and law.
The meeting heard a wide variety of presentations about the intersections of law and emotion, including emotion in recourse to law (e.g. the immigrant justice movement in the US, or the settlement of wills and estate between siblings); emotion in the processes of law (e.g. the role of Judges’ anger in judicial decision making) and emotion in the outcome of legal processes (e.g. the effects of custodial remand, victims’ rights). We also had some excellent framing presentations on the history of thought about emotion and approaches to the study of emotion and law.
Now those of us involved in the meeting are looking at how we can take our work together forward, starting with exchanges of ideas and methodology from our different disciplines.
Some of the group have also contributed to a special edition of the Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly, due out soon. We’ll post a summary and link here as soon as it’s out.
For further developments, watch this space – keep an eye on the CSEL website as we pull together resources and materials to further the study of emotion and law.
13 March 2013
Stuart Turner hands over the baton as chair of trustees
The Centre for the Study of Emotion and
Law has come of age. When Jane Herlihy and I first decided to
establish an organization to investigate the psychological basis for
assumptions made by judges and other decision makers about the
stories they heard, it felt as if we were very much on our own.
Fortunately my medico-legal practice in the Trauma Clinic meant that
I could support this project financially. Soon we had gathered a
group of very eminent advisers and when we were ready to establish
CSEL formally, I agreed to become chair of trustees – until CSEL
was ready to stand on its own. That time has now arrived.
CSEL is now an established and
respected organization providing high quality primary and secondary
research to support fair and just decision making, initially in the
asylum field but with plans to extend its work into other areas. It
is now financially independent of the Trauma Clinic and has been able
to attract support from a wide range of funders. There is a great
body of trustees, of all the talents, and I am delighted that David
Rhys Jones has agreed to continue as acting chair for the time being.
Crucially, Jane has proved to be an outstanding director. Perhaps
even more important than her academic excellence is her ability to
communicate effectively at so many different levels with others in
the field. Jane and I plan to continue to work together, and I look
forward with pleasure to active collaboration in some of the research
work within CSEL, but the time has come for me to step down as
trustee. I feel very much like a proud parent seeing his child off to
university. I am confident in the future of CSEL and I wish it well
for the future.
Stuart Turner
Stuart Turner
27 February 2013
RLI seminars online
Last night the Refugee Law Initiative and CSEL hosted the last in our series of seminars on psychology and seeking asylum. It was well attended and we enjoyed interesting discussions - with the speakers and the audience. Now videos of the first two seminars are available online (with instructions on how to download the audio files). The rest will follow, so watch this space.
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