administrador

administrador

Anália Torres, Full Professor at ISCSP-ULisboa and CIEG's Director, will be distinguished with the Scientific Merit Medal 2023, this Wednesday, July 5th.

The Scientific Merit Medals, awarded each year by the Portuguese Ministry for Science, Technology and Higher Education, aim to reward national and international individuals which have distinguished themselves by their valuable and exceptional contribution to the development of science or of the scientific culture in Portugal, through their professional qualities and line of duty.

The receiving ceremony will be held during the opening session of the Encontro Ciência 2023, taking place at University of Aveiro, in the presence of the Portuguese Prime Minister, António Costa, and the Portuguese Minister for Science, Technology and Higher Education, Professor Elvira Fortunato.

It took place on March 24th, the conference Gender Mainstreming in Medicine and Medical Research, at the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Lisbon (FMUL). The conference was organised within the project ERA Chair iSTARS – Informatics and Statistical Tools for the Advancement of Research Success, promoted by FMUL and funded by the European Union (Project 952377).

Organised by the Faculty of Medicine in collaboration with CIEG, the conference meant to bring this issue, still underexplored in Portugal, to practitioners, researchers, students, and all those interested in applying a gender perspective in medicine and medical research.

Gina Rippon, Emeritus Professor of Cognitive Neuroimaging at Aston University, gave the keynote speech on The Gendered Brain: Do you have a Female or a Male? Or are we asking the wrong question?.

Three others panels with academics from both medicine and sociology took place. The first panel, titled Gender issues in Medicine and Health I had as its speakers Ana Abreu (IMP&SP - FMUL), Anália Torres (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa), Paula Campos Pinto (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa), Diana Maciel (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa) and António Manuel Marques (ESS/IPS: Escola Superior de Saúde).

On the second panel, Gender issues in Medicine and Health II, participated Ana Fernandes (CAPP/ISCSP-ULisboa | CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa), Violeta Alarcão (CIES-ISCTE | ISAMB), Pedro Candeias (ISCTE-IUL | ISAMB), Vasco Prazeres (former Counselor for Gender Equality of the Portuguese Ministry of Health) and Amélia Augusto (UBI).

Lastly, in the panel dedicated to Gender medical research, participated Ruy Ribeiro (Los Alamos National Laboratory (USA) | FMUL), Maria Mota (IMM – João Lobo Antunes) and Brígida Riso (ISAMB-FMUL).

Decorreu no dia 24 de março, a conferência Gender Mainstreming in Medicine and Medical Research na Faculdade de Medicina da Universidade de Lisboa (FMUL), no âmbito do projeto ERA Chair iSTARS – Informatics and Statistical Tools for the Advancement of Research Success, promovido pela FMUL e financiado pela União Europeia (Projeto 952377).

Organizada pela Faculdade de Medicina, em colaboração com o CIEG, a conferência teve como públicos-alvo, médicos/as, investigadores/as e estudantes, bem como a todos/as os/as interessados/as em aplicar a perspetiva do género na medicina e na investigação médica, um tema ainda pouco explorado em Portugal.

O evento contou com o keynote speech da Professora Emérita de Cognitive Neuroimaging da Aston University, Gina Rippon, dedicado ao tema The Gendered Brain: Do you have a Female or a Male? Or are we asking the wrong question?.

Contou, ainda, com três painéis com académicas/os de ambas as áreas de medicina e sociologia. O primeiro, intitulado Gender issues in Medicine and Health I, teve como orador/as Ana Abreu (IMP&SP - FMUL), Anália Torres (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa), Paula Campos Pinto (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa), Diana Maciel (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa) e António Manuel Marques (ESS/IPS: Escola Superior de Saúde).

O segundo painel, Gender issues in Medicine and Health II, contou com a participação de Ana Fernandes (CAPP/ISCSP-ULisboa | CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa), Violeta Alarcão (CIES-ISCTE | ISAMB), Pedro Candeias (ISCTE-IUL | ISAMB), Vasco Prazeres (ex-Conselheiro para a Igualdade de Género do Ministério da Saúde) e Amélia Augusto (UBI).

Por fim, num painel dedicado a Gender in medical research, participaram Ruy Ribeiro (Los Alamos National Laboratory (USA) | FMUL), Maria Mota (IMM – João Lobo Antunes) e Brígida Riso (ISAMB-FMUL).

Wednesday, 21 June 2023 14:50

Call for papers

Versão portuguesa disponível aqui.

Gender, Feminist and Women's Studies: Knowledge, Public Policies and Social Justice

Gender, feminist and women’s studies are currently faced with new challenges and the deepening of old obstacles that compromise their future or may even block it in some countries. The latest financial crisis was followed by a pandemic on a scale only encountered over a century earlier. When this disruption of ways of life and family dynamics was thought to be over, the outbreak of war in Europe accentuated economic struggles, trivialised violence, provoked waves of forced emigration, and accentuated conflict in international relations. This sequence of events was accompanied by the emergence of authoritarian leaderships, by a backlash against science and defence of unfounded knowledge, gathering support from many people, and by a growing influence of religious and political movements, such as populism, seeking to subvert the rule of law and democratic regimes.

Debate and controversy in the public sphere have grown increasingly polarised, often evolving into open conflict and intense antagonism. In this scenario, old challenges such as anti-feminism and attacks on gender studies and gender equality have led to significant setbacks in rights and the attempt to exclude gender studies from academia in some countries. The recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on abortion sets an extreme example of the retreat of a right recognized for 50 years.

Still, these attacks on gender equality and LGBTQIA+ rights, clear manifestations of sexism, homophobia, racism, classism, and sexual violence, have met strong resistance and opposition from movements mobilising thousands and thousands of people on the streets, media and social media, in truly global events. This contestation, despite involving various sectors of the population, was often mobilised by young people, as in the recent and courageous case of young Iranian women.

It must also be acknowledged that there have been important rights achievements in many countries in recent years, such as the recognition of the right to abortion in Argentina, or of the right to same-sex marriage or gender self-determination, in many countries.

Despite these contrasting dynamics, the advances of authoritarian and far-right forces are particularly concerning, recently rising to power in some European countries, or even though they lost it in others, like the US and Brazil, persisting in underground mobilisations that erode democratic values, preach violence, and call into question basic human rights.

These changes to the quality of democracies, and the struggle for rights and for the improvement of people's living conditions, make gender, feminist and women’s studies increasingly relevant, especially in their intersection with social inequalities, racism, and colonialism, even in a context of polarised debate

The Interdisciplinary Centre for Gender Studies thus invites researchers from national and international institutions to contribute to enhancing knowledge on gender equality issues in different countries, but also on current challenges and future prospects for gender, feminist and women’s studies, through the presentation and debate of research on the following topics:

 

Gender, feminisms and women’s studies

  • Epistemological debates, advances, intersectionality and fragmentations: feminist, queer, trans theories, and others
  • Masculinities and critical men’s studies
  • Black feminism and post-colonial studies
  • Spatial dimensions of violence and struggle: from home, to city and territory
  • Cultural and artistic expressions
  • Gender violence and sexual violence: old problems and new challenges

 

Policies, institutions and citizenship

  • Antifeminism, religious movements, and the backlash against science
  • International conflicts and impacts on migration, asylum, refuge, human trafficking, and other issues
  • War in Europe and its implications from a gender perspective
  • Public policies, feminist agendas and pinkwashing
  • Authoritarianism, far-right movements, and attacks on gender equality
  • Cyberfeminism, social media and the polarisation of public space
  • Media, communication, representation and image

 

Gender and living conditions

  • Gender equality, poverty and the deterioration of living standards
  • Effects of the pandemic on gender relations
  • Intersections: sexism, racism and social inequalities
  • Health, ages of life and ageing

 

Gender and sexualities

  • LGBTQIA+ Studies
  • Gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics
  • Sexuality and corporeality: diversity of meanings and practices
  • Sex work, prostitution

 

Information for submission:

Proposals must contain a maximum of 300 words. Each person may submit a maximum of 2 abstracts as main author.

Congress's accepted Languages: Portuguese, English and Spanish

 

Important dates:

  • October 15th, 2023 - Deadline for abstracts submission.
  • November 15th 2023 - Deadline for notice of abstracts’ acceptance/rejection.
  • December 11th, 2023 - Deadline to register with a reduced Early Bird registration fee.
  • December 31st, 2023 - Final registration deadline for participants with accepted abstracts (Participants not registered will be withdrawn from the Congress Programme).

 

Registration fees

Registration fee

Early bird

(up until December 11th 2023)

After December 11th 2023

  Participant

250 €

300 €

  Student

90 €

140 €

  Lower income e middle-lower income  countries

170 €

220 €

 1 day fee 100 € 100 €

 

 Abstract submission platform available here.

 

Wednesday, 21 June 2023 14:47

III International Congress

CIEG's III International Congress

January 31st - February 2nd, 2024

 

Gender, Feminist and Women's Studies: Knowledge, Public Policies and Social Justice

 

Gender, feminist and women’s studies are currently faced with new challenges and the deepening of old obstacles that compromise their future or may even block it in some countries. The latest financial crisis was followed by a pandemic on a scale only encountered over a century earlier. When this disruption of ways of life and family dynamics was thought to be over, the outbreak of war in Europe accentuated economic struggles, trivialised violence, provoked waves of forced emigration, and accentuated conflict in international relations. This sequence of events was accompanied by the emergence of authoritarian leaderships, by a backlash against science and defence of unfounded knowledge, gathering support from many people, and by a growing influence of religious and political movements, such as populism, seeking to subvert the rule of law and democratic regimes.

Debate and controversy in the public sphere have grown increasingly polarised, often evolving into open conflict and intense antagonism. In this scenario, old challenges such as anti-feminism and attacks on gender studies and gender equality have led to significant setbacks in rights and the attempt to exclude gender studies from academia in some countries. The recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on abortion sets an extreme example of the retreat of a right recognized for 50 years.

Still, these attacks on gender equality and LGBTQIA+ rights, clear manifestations of sexism, homophobia, racism, classism, and sexual violence, have met strong resistance and opposition from movements mobilising thousands and thousands of people on the streets, media and social media, in truly global events. This contestation, despite involving various sectors of the population, was often mobilised by young people, as in the recent and courageous case of young Iranian women.

It must also be acknowledged that there have been important rights achievements in many countries in recent years, such as the recognition of the right to abortion in Argentina, or of the right to same-sex marriage or gender self-determination, in many countries.

Despite these contrasting dynamics, the advances of authoritarian and far-right forces are particularly concerning, recently rising to power in some European countries, or even though they lost it in others, like the US and Brazil, persisting in underground mobilisations that erode democratic values, preach violence, and call into question basic human rights.

These changes to the quality of democracies, and the struggle for rights and for the improvement of people's living conditions, make gender, feminist and women’s studies increasingly relevant, especially in their intersection with social inequalities, racism, and colonialism, even in a context of polarised debate

The Interdisciplinary Centre for Gender Studies thus invites researchers from national and international institutions to contribute to enhancing knowledge on gender equality issues in different countries, but also on current challenges and future prospects for gender, feminist and women’s studies, through the presentation and debate of research on the following topics:

 

Gender, feminisms and women’s studies

  • Epistemological debates, advances, intersectionality and fragmentations: feminist, queer, trans theories, and others
  • Masculinities and critical men’s studies
  • Black feminism and post-colonial studies
  • Spatial dimensions of violence and struggle: from home, to city and territory
  • Cultural and artistic expressions
  • Gender violence and sexual violence: old problems and new challenges

 

Policies, institutions and citizenship

  • Antifeminism, religious movements, and the backlash against science
  • International conflicts and impacts on migration, asylum, refuge, human trafficking, and other issues
  • War in Europe and its implications from a gender perspective
  • Public policies, feminist agendas and pinkwashing
  • Authoritarianism, far-right movements, and attacks on gender equality
  • Cyberfeminism, social media and the polarisation of public space
  • Media, communication, representation and image

 

Gender and living conditions

  • Gender equality, poverty and the deterioration of living standards
  • Effects of the pandemic on gender relations
  • Intersections: sexism, racism and social inequalities
  • Health, ages of life and ageing

 

Gender and sexualities

  • LGBTQIA+ Studies
  • Gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics
  • Sexuality and corporeality: diversity of meanings and practices
  • Sex work, prostitution

 

Important dates:

  • October 15th, 2023 - Deadline for abstracts submission.
  • November 15th - Deadline for notice of abstracts’ acceptance/rejection.
  • December 11th, 2023 - Deadline to register with a reduced Early Bird registration fee.
  • December 31st, 2023 - Final registration deadline for participants with accepted abstracts (Participants not registered will be withdrawn from the Congress Programme).

 

Registration fees

 

Registration fee

Early bird

(up until December 11th 2023)

After December 11th 2023

  Participant

250 €

300 €

  Student

90 €

140 €

  Lower income e middle-lower income  countries

170 €

220 €

 1 day fee 100 € 100 €

 

 Abstract submission platform available here.

 

Venue:

Institute for Social and Political Sciences of the University of Lisbon

Rua Almerindo Lessa, 1300-663 Lisboa (Portugal)

 

Additional queries:

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

III International CIEG Congress

January 31st - February 2nd, 2024

 

Gender, Feminist and Women's Studies: Knowledge, Public Policies and Social Justice

Gender, feminist and women’s studies are currently faced with new challenges and the deepening of old obstacles that compromise their future or may even block it in some countries. The latest financial crisis was followed by a pandemic on a scale only encountered over a century earlier. When this disruption of ways of life and family dynamics was thought to be over, the outbreak of war in Europe accentuated economic struggles, trivialised violence, provoked waves of forced emigration, and accentuated conflict in international relations. This sequence of events was accompanied by the emergence of authoritarian leaderships, by a backlash against science and defence of unfounded knowledge, gathering support from many people, and by a growing influence of religious and political movements, such as populism, seeking to subvert the rule of law and democratic regimes.

Debate and controversy in the public sphere have grown increasingly polarised, often evolving into open conflict and intense antagonism. In this scenario, old challenges such as anti-feminism and attacks on gender studies and gender equality have led to significant setbacks in rights and the attempt to exclude gender studies from academia in some countries. The recent U.S. Supreme Court ruling on abortion sets an extreme example of the retreat of a right recognized for 50 years.

Still, these attacks on gender equality and LGBTQIA+ rights, clear manifestations of sexism, homophobia, racism, classism, and sexual violence, have met strong resistance and opposition from movements mobilising thousands and thousands of people on the streets, media and social media, in truly global events. This contestation, despite involving various sectors of the population, was often mobilised by young people, as in the recent and courageous case of young Iranian women.

It must also be acknowledged that there have been important rights achievements in many countries in recent years, such as the recognition of the right to abortion in Argentina, or of the right to same-sex marriage or gender self-determination, in many countries.

Despite these contrasting dynamics, the advances of authoritarian and far-right forces are particularly concerning, recently rising to power in some European countries, or even though they lost it in others, like the US and Brazil, persisting in underground mobilisations that erode democratic values, preach violence, and call into question basic human rights.

These changes to the quality of democracies, and the struggle for rights and for the improvement of people's living conditions, make gender, feminist and women’s studies increasingly relevant, especially in their intersection with social inequalities, racism, and colonialism, even in a context of polarised debate

The Interdisciplinary Centre for Gender Studies thus invites researchers from national and international institutions to contribute to enhancing knowledge on gender equality issues in different countries, but also on current challenges and future prospects for gender, feminist and women’s studies, through the presentation and debate of research on the following topics:

 

Gender, feminisms and women’s studies

  • Epistemological debates, advances, intersectionality and fragmentations: feminist, queer, trans theories, and others
  • Masculinities and critical men’s studies
  • Black feminism and post-colonial studies
  • Spatial dimensions of violence and struggle: from home, to city and territory
  • Cultural and artistic expressions
  • Gender violence and sexual violence: old problems and new challenges

 

Policies, institutions and citizenship

  • Antifeminism, religious movements, and the backlash against science
  • International conflicts and impacts on migration, asylum, refuge, human trafficking, and other issues
  • War in Europe and its implications from a gender perspective
  • Public policies, feminist agendas and pinkwashing
  • Authoritarianism, far-right movements, and attacks on gender equality
  • Cyberfeminism, social media and the polarisation of public space
  • Media, communication, representation and image

 

Gender and living conditions

  • Gender equality, poverty and the deterioration of living standards
  • Effects of the pandemic on gender relations
  • Intersections: sexism, racism and social inequalities
  • Health, ages of life and ageing

 

Gender and sexualities

  • LGBTQIA+ Studies
  • Gender identity and expression, and sex characteristics
  • Sexuality and corporeality: diversity of meanings and practices
  • Sex work, prostitution

 

Information for submission:

Proposals must contain a maximum of 300 words. Each person may submit a maximum of 2 abstracts as main author.

Congress's accepted Languages: Portuguese, English and Spanish

 

Important dates:

  • October 15th, 2023 - Deadline for abstracts submission.
  • November 15th - Deadline for notice of abstracts’ acceptance/rejection.
  • December 11th, 2023 - Deadline to register with a reduced Early Bird registration fee.
  • December 31st, 2023 - Final registration deadline for participants with accepted abstracts (Participants not registered will be withdrawn from the Congress Programme).

 

Registration fees

Registration fee

Early bird

(up until December 11th 2023)

After December 11th 2023

  Participant

250 €

300 €

  Student

90 €

140 €

  Lower income e middle-lower income  countries

170 €

220 €

  1 day fee 100 € 100 €

 

 Abstract submission platform available here.

 

Venue:

Institute for Social and Political Sciences of the University of Lisbon

Rua Almerindo Lessa, 1300-663 Lisboa (Portugal)

 

Additional queries:

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

The project Free Choices - Estereótipos não fazem o meu género: escolhas vocacionais e profissionais livres de preconceitos is promoted by UMAR – União de Mulheres Alternativa e Resposta and funded by the Work-life Balance and Gender Equality Programme of the European Economic Area Financial Mechanism – EEAGrants 2014-2021. CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa, ATEC – Associação de Formação para a Indústria, Associação Nós – Instituição Particular de Solidariedade Social, the University of Jyväskylä (Finland), and the Icelandic Women´s Rights Association (Iceland) are the project’s partners along with various high schools and schools.

The main project’s goals are the deconstruction of gender stereotypes which legitimise and contribute for the reproduction of a sexual segregation of academic and professional choices of youth, fomenting youth’s participation and critical analysis on the prevention of gender stereotypes and the promotion of gender equality. It also aims to develop collaborative work, involving the different agents who have an important role in the transformation of this paradigm of segregation. And to implement a prevention of stereotypes and promotion of equality programme, in the school context, aimed at vocational orientation, with students from the 7th to the 9th grades.

Manuela Tavares (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa | UMAR) is the project’s coordinator and Maria João Cunha (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa) the scientific consultant.

You can follow all the project’s activities through the projects Instagram, TikTok and website.

FCT announced the opening of the 6th edition of the Individual Call to Scientific Employment Stimulus. Applications can be submitted from April 4th until May 3rd 2023.

 CIEG will be accepting applications as the host institution from researchers with PhD whose projects are aligned with CIEG's goals and research lines. More information on the Centre's research lines, here.

Interested candidates must submit the request to have CIEG as hosting institution by April 17th 2023 with the documents and information below:

  • Category to which they are applying (Junior, Auxiliary, Principal or Coordinating Researcher);
  • Research line to which they are applying;
  • Summary of the proposed work plan (Background; Research plan and methods; Expected outcomes), with a maximum of 5.000 characters;
  • Detailed Curriculum Vitae (5 pages max.)
  • Cover letter, in which is detailed the scientific career and path as well as the relevance of the activities explicited on the project proposal (2 pages max.)

 

All contact made regarding the application must be made through this e-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., with subject “CEEC 6ª edição – Manifestação de Interesse”.

Additional information on the Notice of the Call, the Regulation, and also on FCT's website.

IMPORTANT: The application to CIEG as the hosting institution does not substitute the application to FCT, here.

 

The Interdisciplinary Centre for Gender Studies of the Institute of Social and Political Sciences (CIEG/ISCSP-ULisboa) opens a call for granting 1 (one) PhD Research Studentship, in the area of Gender Studies, under the FCT Regulation for Studentships and Fellowships (RBI) and the Research Fellowship Holder Statute (EBI).

The grant will be funded by the Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT) under the terms of the Collaboration Protocol for Funding of the Pluriannual Research Grant Plan for PhD Students, signed between the FCT and the R&D Unit CIEG, Nº 4304.

The call is open between March 27th 2023 and the 17.00h April 17th 2023.

The portuguese version is available here.
The english version is available here

Thursday, 25 August 2022 11:20

II International Congress - general gallery

Opening Session

Anália Torres (CIEG's Coordinator) and Alice Trindade (Vice-President of ISCSP-ULisboa)