by Blaine Pope, Ph.D. Since I traveled to Jordan for the first time, for the January 2020 ACOR-CAORC Faculty Development Seminar “Sustainability at the Margins,” life in the United States, in Jordan, and around the world has changed noticeably. The onset of the COVID-19 pandemic and massive worldwide protests against racism stemming from the Black…
CAORC
Julia Gettle, ACOR-CAORC Pre-Doctoral Fellow Spring 2019
Julia Gettle is a Ph.D. candidate in History at Brown University and an ACOR-CAORC pre-doctoral fellow for spring 2019. Her research while at ACOR focuses on the social and intellectual history of popular politics in mid-20th century Greater Syria, particularly centering on Pan-Arab nationalist, nation-state nationalist, and Marxist political mobilization in the 1950s and 1960s….
Announcing ACOR 2018–2019 Fellowships
[vc_row][vc_column][vc_column_text css=”.vc_custom_1508413626381{margin-top: 0px !important;margin-right: 0px !important;margin-bottom: 0px !important;margin-left: 0px !important;}”][rev_slider alias=”Fellowships18-19″][/vc_column_text][vc_column_text] ACOR Fellowship Opportunities for the 2018–2019 academic year Complete information about all the ACOR Fellowships is online at https://www.acorjordan.org/about-acor-fellowships/. The application portal is open. We encourage you to share these opportunities widely with your networks. The deadline for applications is February 1, 2018 and awards will…
Life After Collapse: Water and Environment in the Late Neolithic of Southern Jordan
Recent ACOR-CAORC fellow and archaeologist Kathleen Bennallack writes below about her current research in southern Jordan. During the 2015–16 academic year, I spent more than six months at ACOR conducting dissertation research—learning stone tool types and how they change through time; learning how to read climate data; finding publications that are nearly impossible to find…