-------- Original Message --------
Subject: FGS Announcements: 10 September 2009
Date: Thu, 10 Sep 2009 14:54:31 -0500
From: Enza Pohl <Enza_Pohl@umanitoba.ca>
To: awards-contacts@lists.umanitoba.ca


Faculty of Graduate Studies Announcements To All Awards Contacts:

Please distribute as required. This message has been sent to graduate students.

Enza


To view this email in your web browser, please click link http://umanitoba.ca/graduate_studies/htmlmail/awrd20090910.hmtl

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     The Faculty of Graduate Studies would like to bring the following competition(s) to your attention:

Announcements: 10 September 2009

 
Title of Award or Scholarship
Application Deadline or Date of Event
Research Area
Study Level (M=Master, D=Doctoral)
Value
         
VANIER CANADA GRADUATE SCHOLARSHIP September 28 Unrestricted D $50,000 per year for up to three years
         

 

New Course Offering

DEPARTMENT OF SOCIOLOGY
Issues in Health Care:
Deviance, Medicalization, and Social Control

SOC7370 (A01)
Winter 2010, 3 credit hours
Time & Place: Wednesdays from 1:00pm – 4:00pm; 335 Isbister Building

Instructor: Dr. Christopher J. Fries
Email: CJ_Fries@umanitoba.ca
Telephone: 474-7871 (with voice mail)

As Foucault has pointed out, the institution of medicine is about much more than providing health care. Medicine is a key apparatus of social control in advanced liberal societies such as Canada. Sociologists have been studying medicalization—the extension of scientific-medical authority into areas of social life including the tendency to view undesirable conduct as ―illness‖ requiring medical intervention—for decades.What are the consequences of medicalization for society and how we understand ourselves? In which ways are the engines of medicalization shifting? How is medicalization part of larger cultural developments in the societies of the West? What role do the ―psy‖ disciplines play in a medicalized framing of the self? These questions and debates, among others, will be examined in this seminar through the detailed and critical consideration of three recent texts concerning the sociological and philosophical consequences of medicalization.

 

Student Providing Aligned Research and Knowledge (SPARK) Pilot Program

It is with great enthusiasm that I am writing to provide you with information on the Canada School of Public Service’s Student Providing Aligned Research and Knowledge (SPARK) Pilot Program. SPARK is operated in partnership with the Public Service Commission, as part of their Research Affiliate Program (RAP).

Under the program, selected graduate students work from their campus location; are paid for research projects in the field of public administration and public policy; gain knowledge and experience addressing practical, real-life issues; and can potentially be hired into an indeterminate position upon graduation. Students can also receive course credit for their SPARK project if the following requirements are met: 

  • The student is enrolled in a course that is scheduled concurrently with their employment under SPARK;
  • The research being conducting under SPARK is of applicable subject matter; and
  • The course professor and the hiring organization are aware of and in agreement with the arrangement.  

Examples of projects undertaken to date include researching: 

  • Selected Economic Trends in Canada’s Economic Regions from 1996 to 2006; and
  • International experiences in addressing the misuse of alcohol, and addressing the misuse and diversion of pharmaceuticals.

We kindly seek your assistance to share this information with all graduate students who might be interested in this opportunity. Students can view and apply for jobs at: http://jobs-emplois.gc.ca/rap-par/index-eng.htm. SPARK opportunities are clearly indentified in the title of the posting under the link “Current opportunities”, and will be made available on an on-going basis – so it is important for students to check the site regularly.

For more information on the program and application process, please consult the SPARK website. If you have any questions or concerns regarding the program in general, please let us know via spark-eclair@csps-efpc.gc.ca.

 

Useful Information on the FGS website

Awards FAQ
http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/graduate_studies/funding/581.htm
Admissions FAQ:
http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/graduate_studies/admissions/140.htm
Admissions Fee Information:
http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/graduate_studies/admissions/582.htm
Registration
http://umanitoba.ca/student/records/registration/index.html
Important dates and deadlines
http://umanitoba.ca/student/records/deadlines/index.html
Thesis questions:
http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/graduate_studies/thesis/250.htm
Graduate Studies Forms e.g. masters’, phd; transfer of credit, etc.
http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/graduate_studies/forms/index.html
2009-2010 Academic Calendar and other publications
http://umanitoba.ca/faculties/graduate_studies/publications/index.html
Please note that our office does not deal with course fees, the Registrars’ office does – 4th Floor Univ. Ctre, but some information can be found here:
http://umanitoba.ca/student/records/fees/988.htm

 

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--
Mrs. Enza Pohl
Awards Assistant
Faculty of Graduate Studies
500 University Centre
University of Manitoba
R3T 2N2

Telephone 204-474-6827
Fax 204-474-7553
Email: Enza_Pohl@umanitoba.ca

-- 
Martha Blouw, Academic Advisor
Department of Plant Science
226 Agriculture Building
66 Dafoe Road
University of Manitoba
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada R3T 2N2
Phone: (204) 474-8223  Fax: (204) 474-7528
http://www.umanitoba.ca/afs/plant_science/