The London School of Economics and Political Science offers Postdoctoral
Fellows (up to five positions) on a Programme of Research on Inequality and
Poverty in India.
Fixed term for up to three years and to ideally commence in October 2013.
Salary
is not less than £32,469 pa inclusive (pro rata if part time)
The LSE Anthropology Department is
pleased to invite applications to the above posts to be funded by the
ESRC and the EU ERC. The positions offer an exciting opportunity to join an
international research team working on inequality and poverty led by Dr
Alpa Shah in collaboration with Dr Jens Lerche (SOAS), Dr Clarinda Still
(Oxford), Professor Jonathan Parry (LSE) and
Professor Barbara Harriss-White (Oxford).
Successful candidates will benefit from engagement with a number of international
experts as well as a number of in-house experts such as Mukulika Banerjee,
Laura Bear, Stuart Corbridge and Deborah James. The aim is to develop
perspectives of political economy within the discipline of anthropology
by ethnographically investigating the persistence of poverty amongst adivasis
and dalits in the belly of the Indian economic boom.
Background
Too often the way in which we
theorise rural social transformation draws disproportionately on the agrarian
transition as experienced in Western Europe.
By focusing on the case of the poorest sections of society in contemporary India (eg
adivasis and dalits), we seek to develop a comparative framework for the study
of poverty that focuses on the interrelationship between economic and other
aspects of the production of inequality (such as caste, ethnicity and
religion). We will explain the processes through which poverty and processes of
socio-economic marginalisation persist in India, and why and how they affect
some groups more than others. Within the discipline of anthropology we seek to reinvigorate
the significance of understanding the transformation in social relations and
interactions between people which affect the ways in which they reproduce
themselves, exploit and use each other; these are processes which create both
poverty and welfare. The overall aim is for our ethnographically informed
studies to contribute to a comparative project exploring changing patterns of inequality
and poverty.
Details
Fellows will join a collaborative
research training and writing programme with international expert advisors
including Professor Jan Breman, Professor Ravi Srivastava, Professor K P
Kannan, Professor Patricia Jeffery, Dr Isabelle Guérin, Dr Matthew McCartney
and Dr Bengt Karlsson. They will join one of the leading Departments of
Anthropology in the world, contribute to its distinguished and cutting-edge
Friday morning weekly Research Seminar. In the first phase of the Fellowship,
Fellows will actively participate in and contribute to a weekly research
training programme based at the LSE. In the second phase of the Fellowship,
they will spend at least 12 months undertaking a substantive piece of new
field-research. In the final phase of the Fellowship, Fellows will participate
in a weekly writing programme based at the LSE. Some aspects of the research
will be developed collaboratively and conducted across the field sites of each
Fellow for the programme to be comparative as a whole. However, it is fully
expected that Fellows will develop their own independent research trajectories
over the course of the Fellowship within the frame of the overall research
programme. Candidates should ideally seek to work in rural central and eastern India (including Bihar, Eastern UP, West Bengal,
Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh, Orissa, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtra, and northern Andhra Pradesh) but
applications for all parts of the country will
be considered. In exceptional circumstances, candidates seeking to work reduced
hours will be considered. Over the course of
the Fellowship, successful candidates are expected to finalise their prior work for publication, begin to develop the new
research undertaken into a monograph and single
authored articles, as well as work on a series of collaborative articles with
members of the team, and contribute to an
impact plan.
Requirements
Before commencing post,
Fellows must have submitted a PhD. The PhD should be in Social
Anthropology or in a
related discipline which has required them to undertake extensive long-term ethnographic
field research in India.
They should be able to work well in a team.
Applications Procedure
To apply for this post
please go to www.lse.ac.uk/JobsatLSE and click on ‘Vacancies’ .
Candidates will be asked
to submit the following:
1) A Covering letter
2) A CV
3) Two supporting
documents:
· A sample of written work of chapter or article length
· A research statement of no more than four pages. This should
include:
o 1-2 page summary of PhD thesis
o A short summary of 2 pages on how they might contribute to the
overall comparative Programme. More than one possible direction may be
proposed, at the discretion of the candidate. This document will form a
basis for discussion if the applicant is shortlisted. It is anticipated
that each individual study will to some extent be modified to optimize
the coherence of the project as a whole.
4) Names of three
academic references
Informal enquiries may be
made to Dr Alpa Shah: a.m.shah@lse.ac.uk
Applications should be
received by 4 April 2013.
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