Job opportunity: Teaching Fellow in Cultural Heritage
A fantastic opportunity to join the Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage in one of two 'Teaching Fellow in Cultural Heritage' posts.
A fantastic opportunity to join the Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage in one of two 'Teaching Fellow in Cultural Heritage' posts.
A fantastic opportunity to join the Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage in one of two 'Teaching Fellow in Cultural Heritage' posts.
Post holders will have the opportunity to design and deliver modules for our well established and leading post graduate teaching programmes (International Heritage Management and World Heritage Studies), develop and participate in off campus study weeks and field trips, undertake professional development in teaching, and contribute to knowledge transfer on own specialism.
Deadline to apply: 18th May 2018
For the full job specification, please visit the UoB jobs portal and select ‘academic and clinical’ from the drop down menu. https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/staff/jobs/index.aspx
Job Codes: 59233 and 51511
Queries to: Professor Mike Robinson, m.d.robinson@bham.ac.uk
About IIICH
Ironbridge International Institute for Cultural Heritage (IIICH) is a focal point for cross-disciplinary research, postgraduate teaching and policy engagement.
Our aims are:
IIICH is a partnership formed over 30 years ago between the University of Birmingham and the Ironbridge Gorge Museum Trust (IGMT) which manages the World Heritage Site and ten museums in Shropshire, UK. Both organisations share a commitment to quality research, innovative education, creativity and engagement with the international heritage sector and the wider public.
Through our partnership IIICH is able to offer:
The Cultural Heritage Agenda
Heritage, as a way by which cultures and societies value, represent and understand the past, is widely recognised not only as an increasingly important resource, which is produced, exhibited and consumed, but also as an essential element in shaping, projecting and challenging identities from the level of the individual to that of the nation state.
IIICH is committed to advancing understandings of cultural heritage and the multiple and dynamic relationships it shares with societies and communities, economies and spaces.
We understand cultural heritage not only as material culture, tangibly present in formalised and structured environments such as museums, galleries and landscapes, but also in intangible ways as in rituals, performances, stories and memories.
We seek to better understand the various and complex processes by which heritage is produced and consumed, how it is managed and interpreted and how it is mediated and received, from the personal and the local, to the level of ‘world’ heritage.