Mata Atlântica e Baía de Guanabara: entre história e desafios

Mata Atlântica e Baía de Guanabara em debate no Jardim Botânico do Rio de Janeiro.

Pesquisadores e especialistas de diversas instituições compõem a mesa que acontece na sexta-feira, dia 2 de junho, às 14h, na Escola Nacional de Botânica Tropical (ENBT), na Rua Pacheco Leão, 2040, Horto. A entrada é gratuita.

O jornalista Emanuel Alencar falará sobre programas de despoluição da Baía de Guanabara. A historiadora Lise Sedrez (mutirão de reflorestamento do Rio), o pesquisador Breno Herrera (pesca artesanal) e o chefe do Parque Estadual da Serra da Tiririca, Ricardo Voivodic (ecossistema da Guanabara), completam o time.

Environmental Impact of the Portuguese Empire

On next Friday, June 2nd, the syposium Environmental Impact of the Portuguese Empire begins at the King’s College, organized by Francisco Bethencourt, with the presense of José Augusto Pádua.

Live broadcasting at KODLA7425.

Environmental Impact of the Portuguese Empire

Programme June 2-3 King’s College London, Strand, Anatomy Museum (King’s Building floor 6). Organised by the Charles Boxer Chair of History with the support of the Camões Institute (Portugal) and the Observatory of Democracy in Latin America

Atlas Miller, 1519, Bibliothèque Nationale de France

Friday, June 2

10h00: Opening session – Francisco Bethencourt (KCL)

I. Origins and Infra-structures

Chair: Chloe Ireton (UCL)

10h10 Gabriel de Avilez Rocha (Brown University) –

Expansion Reconsidered: Eco-Material and Political Transformations in Fifteenth-Century Atlantic Corridors

10h30 Koldo Trápaga Monchet (Universidad Rey Juan Carlos) –

Conservation or destruction? Revisiting the environmental impact of the shipbuilding industry of Lisbon and the sugar industry in Madeira Island (15th-17th centuries)

10h50 Amélia Polónia (Universidade do Porto) –

Environmental impacts of the historical uses of the seas. The Portuguese seaports, 1500-1800

12h00 LUNCH

II. Panel of discussion

Chair: José Vicente Serrão

13h30 Cátia Antunes (Leiden University); Sujit Sivasundaram (University of Cambridge); Tiago Saraiva (Drexel University) [via Zoom]; Toby Green (KCL); Francisco Bethencourt (KCL)

III. Indigenous and Environmental Rights

Chair: Francisco Bethencourt

15h00 José Pedro Monteiro (CESC, Universidade do Minho)  –

Economic development, political integration, cultural and environmental preservation: the promises of Portuguese late colonial reformism (1961-1970)

15h20 José Miguel Ferreira (ICS, Universidade de Lisboa) –

Into the Woods. Nature, Forests and Colonialism in 19th Century Goa

16h00 BREAK

16h30 José Vicente Serrão (ISCTE-IUL) –

Colonization, Native land rights and environmental issues: how did all these intersect in the early modern Portuguese empire?

16h50Décio Guzmán (Universidade Federal do Pará) –

Indigenous communities in the Amazon [via Zoom]

Saturday, June 3

IV. Brazil

Chair: Susana Münch Miranda

10h00 José Augusto Pádua (Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro) –

Perceptions of environmental deterioration in late Portuguese America

10h20 Diogo de Carvalho Cabral (Trinity College Dublin), Ana Lunara Morais (Rio Grande do Norte Federal University/Campina Grande Federal University), Cristiane Barreto (University of Brasília) – 

Geoecologies of empire: space, natural resources and the making of the sugar nobility in colonial Brazil 

11h00 BREAK

11h30 Miguel Carmo (IHC, Universidade Nova de Lisboa), Joana Sousa (CES, Universidade de Coimbra), Ricardo Ventura (CEG, Universidade Aberta) –

The strange case of white rice in Maranhão: the plantation and its contraries from a long-term transatlantic perspective

11h50 Vinicius de Carvalho (King’s College London) –

The long-term impact of mining in Minas Gerais

12h30 LUNCH

V. Africa

Chair: Alexandra Lourenço Dias (KCL Camões Centre)

14h00 Susana Münch Miranda (Universidade Nova de Lisboa) and João Paulo Salvado (Universidade de Évora) –

Ivory extraction and trade in the Portuguese South Atlantic empire, 1725-1820

14h20 Marta Macedo (IHC, Universidade Nova de Lisboa) –

São Tomé plantation ecologies: vulnerabilities and disruptions

15h30 BREAK

16h00 Barbara Direito (CIUHCT, DCSA, NOVA School of Science and Technology) –

“Islands in a sea of flies” – livestock, animal disease and the environment in Mozambique, 1900s-1940s

16h20 Bernardo Pinto Cruz (Universidade Nova de Lisboa) –

The developmental effects of late-colonial coercion: countersubversion at Cunene (Angola) and Cahora Bassa (Mozambique), 1968-1974

Concluding remarks:

Cátia Antunes (Leiden University)Contact Email: francisco.bethencourt@kcl.ac.ukURL: https://www.youtube.com/@kodla7425

Doctoral Program Environment and Society

The Doctoral Program Environment and Society is aimed at graduates from the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences who wish to research questions concerning the nature/culture/environment interface. Within the scope of the program, doctoral students acquire the ability to understand the origins and interactions of complex natural and social processes. The doctoral program brings together expertise on environmental research from university and non-university institutions in Munich. The program is based at the Rachel Carson Center for Environment and Society, a joint initiative of LMU Munich and the Deutsches Museum. Its stimulating research environment, intensive supervision, and opportunity to form international networks offer excellent conditions for doctoral students.

RCC, LMM

Application Process

Applicants wishing to be admitted to this doctoral program must hold a Master’s degree from a recognized university, show evidence of excellence in their field of study, and present a plan for a doctoral project in one of the following areas or combination of areas:

  • History: Environmental History, History of Science and Technology
  • Sociology: Environmental Sociology, Political Economy, Sociology of Economics
  • Energy and Resource Economics for Sustainability
  • Geography: Modeling Social-Ecological Relations and Systems, Historical Geography, Political Ecology
  • Geology and Natural Catastrophes
  • Bioarcheology, Life Sciences in Society
  • Biology: Paleoanatomy and Archaeology
  • Environmental Law
  • Environmental Policy: Comparative, International, or Politics of Ecological Transitions
  • Environmental Ethics
  • Anthropology: Environmental, Urban, or Political; especially Latin America and Pacific
  • Cultural Studies, Art and the Environment in Historical Perspective
  • Environmental Humanities, Literature and Environment

Please submit your application via the online application portal of the LMU GraduateCenter.

You will need the following documents for your online application:

  • Copies of university degree(s) held;
  • Proof of higher education entrance qualification (high school diploma or equivalent);
  • Master’s thesis (if in a language other than English or German, please provide a table of contents and an exposé of max. 5 pages in English);
  • An academic curriculum vitae (including publications, if applicable);
  • A statement of purpose for your application to the program (up to two pages);
  • A research proposal (max. 5 pages, including bibliography, footnotes, and time table);
  • The name of a member of the Academic Board whose research interests match the dissertation project;
  • Name and contact information for two academic referees (university lecturers), able to give information about your suitability for the program and your academic potential.

Candidates can join the program in either the winter or the summer semester. Applications are due through the online application portal by 15 May for the winter semester and 15 November for the summer semester. Applicants will be notified of the outcome of their application by the end of July (for a start date of 1 October) or by the end of January (for a start date of 1 April). The portal will open ca. 5 weeks prior to the application deadline.

Selection of candidates will be made on the basis of the documents submitted and may additionally include an academic interview with a member of the selection committee. Interviews can be conducted via Skype/Zoom.

The selection committee will base its choice on the following factors: quality and feasibility of the research proposal, qualifications held, communication skills and teamwork ability, and demonstrated willingness and ability to work on interdisciplinary theoretical and methodological questions.

Bolsas de estudo – França

Foi lançado pela Embaixada da França no Brasil um novo edital de bolsas de estudos para a França!

🇫🇷🌳 O programa é destinado aos estudantes do primeiro, segundo ou terceiro ano de doutorado no Brasil que estejam pesquisando sobre temas na área de ecologia e ciências ambientais.

🔬 Por meio desse programa de bolsas, a Embaixada da França no Brasil tem o objetivo de fortalecer a cooperação científica entre Brasil e França, sobretudo em questões cruciais da crise climática e da perda da biodiversidade.Mais informações no site https://www.bresil.campusfrance.org/

AD Scientific Index (2023)

In the AD Scientific Index 2023, João Fragoso, and José Augusto Pádua are placed 21st and 55th respectively for academic mentions, in the edition for Latin America Top 100 scholars in History, Philosophy, Theology.


https://www.adscientificindex.com/top-100-scientist/?tit=History%2C+Philosophy%2C+Theology&con=Latin+America&country_code=&subject=

Late prof. Manolo Florentino, former Program coordinator, is placed 84th in the ranking.

Lejeune and Luiza’s Guanabara

As part of the parallel activities of the Futures of Guanabara Bay exhibition, the Science and Culture Forum invites everyone to the lecture “Lejeune and Luiza’s Guanabara: the Pinheiro Island hydrobiology laboratory”, given by historian Lise Sedrez.

Date: 14 de abril Time: 18h Location: Casa da Ciência – Rua Lauro Müller, 3, Botafogo, Rio de Janeiro. Previous registration NOT required.

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Ethics in Science

Professor Cláudio Pinheiro was invited by the Social Science Research Committee (SSRC) and the MacArthur Foundation to develop a pilot program on Ethics in Science.

The project analyzes how criteria for measuring scientific reputations used by funding agencies reinforce inequalities and exclusion mechanisms in science.

The investigation prioritizes collaborative research concepts, between groups of researchers, organized in transnational and interdisciplinary teams, and includes archival research, interviews and analysis of macro-indicators on the Indian Ocean.

Deivid Gaia is JCNE – Faperj

Prof. Deivid Valerio Gaia was awarded the Jovem Cientista do Nosso Estado grant from FAPERJ, with the project: Creditors and debtors in a life on credit: credit relations, interest rates and financial crises in the Roman world of the 1st century BC. to the fourth century AD.

The CNE and JCNE programs are intended to support, through competition, projects coordinated by researchers of recognized leadership in their area, with employment in teaching and research institutions based in the State of Rio de Janeiro.

The selected proposals will receive monthly funds for up to 36 (thirty-six) months, aiming to provide support for the development of their research projects.

Paulo Fontes is CNE – Faperj

Paulo Fontes

Prof. Paulo Fontes was awarded FAPERJ’S Scientist of Our State fellowship. The project thus awarded is entitled: Black trade unionists in the “Trade Union Republic”: Racial relations and labor in São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro (1945-1964).

The CNE and JCNE programs are intended to support, through competition, projects coordinated by leader researchers in their area, with employment in teaching and research institutions based in the State of Rio de Janeiro.

The selected proposals will receive monthly funds for up to 36 (thirty-six) months, aiming to provide support for the development of their research projects.

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