World map, William Faden, 1786 - CLICK FOR MORE INFORMATIONShip's compass aboard the ship Balclutha - CLICK FOR MORE INFORMATION

  • Awards, Prizes & Grants
  • Special Interest Groups
  • International Scholars Program
  • Travel Grants
  • Benefits of Membership
  • Member Services
  • Officers, Committees, and Governance

SHOT 2010

  • Welcome to Tacoma
  • MEETING REGISTRATION FORM
  • Program Overview
  • Schedule of Sessions
  • Special Interest Group (SIG) Activities
  • SHOT Tours
  • Special Events
  • Conference Hotel
  • Transportation
  • Tacoma Beyond SHOT

 

 
 
 
 

 

International Scholars Program

Each year the Society for the History of Technology designates up to four International Scholars for a two-year term. The International Scholars program is administered by the International Outreach Committee.

Background and Mission

In 1992 the Society for the History of Technology inaugurated the International Scholars program with these goals:

  1. Foster a stronger international community for the study of the history of technology
  2. Strengthen the society's role as an international society for the history of technology
  3. Identify and help non-U.S. historians of technology participate in the meetings and governance of the Society
  4. Provide formal recognition for the work of non-U.S. historians of technology so that their respective governments and national academic communities might provide greater support for their society-related activities
  5. Afford special recognition for younger, non-U.S. scholars as they begin their careers in the history of technology
  6. Foster an international network of scholars in the history of technology that will benefit all members of the society

Nowadays the mandate of the International Outreach Committee is slightly different. More attention is given to scholars from countries outside the U.S. and Western Europe, not only to foster their individual careers but also to support local networks and activities for and by scholars working on the history of technology. International
Scholars shall act as ambassadors for the Society in their countries and regions, both by informing the Society about the state and developments of the history of technology in their regions, and by helping to disseminate information about the Society and its activities.

Eligibility and Selection Process

To become a SHOT International Scholar, you must reside and work in underrepresented countries at the time of selection. Graduate students, post-docs, and visiting scholars who are living and working in the United States or Western Europe are not eligible to become International Scholars; however, they are eligible to apply once they return to their home countries. Of these potential candidates, anyone at any rank, from graduate student up through senior scholar, is eligible to become an International Scholar.

Individuals may be nominated as International Scholars by any member of the Society, and we also encourage self-nomination. To nominate yourself or someone else as an International Scholar, please send a letter and a brief curriculum vitae to EACH member of the International Outreach Committee and to SHOT secretary Bernie Carlson at shot@virginia.edu. Letters must include:

  • why you would like to be an International Scholar,
  • how you plan to advance the mission of the International Scholar program
  • the current state of history of technology research in your home country and your home institution, and
  • how your research will enrich existing knowledge in the field.

Each year in March a call will be send out to recruit new International Scholars. The deadline for nominations is set towards the end of April. In consultation with the President and Secretary, and in accordance with criteria established by the Executive Committee, SHOT’s International Outreach Committee shall be responsible for the selection of the International Scholars, with the selection to be approved by SHOT’s Executive Council. New candidates will be selected beginning of June.

Benefits and Support

International Scholars shall receive regular SHOT membership at no cost during their two-year term. At each annual meeting, SHOT will host a special gathering to welcome current International Scholars, introduce them to SHOT officers, and discuss with them SHOT’s international outreach and the international intellectual dimensions of our field.

International Scholars will participate in an email discussion list of all current International Scholars and the International Outreach Committee. Through the list International Scholars can seek support in writing paper abstracts for SHOT's annual meeting and other activities in their task as ambassadors for the Society.

Conditions

As a condition of appointment, SHOT requires International Scholars to submit at least one paper proposal for SHOT's annual meeting during their two-year term. While paper proposals from International Scholars will not automatically be accepted for the annual meeting, SHOT encourages the program committee to give these proposals special consideration.

SHOT also requires International Scholars to submit a travel grant application for each of the two SHOT annual meetings during the two years of their appointment. International Scholars receive highest priority for SHOT funding. Travel grant funds will help pay for travel expenses for International Scholars to attend the annual meeting and for basic conference registration, although not for lodging. For more information, please check the SHOT Travel Grant information page, available by link from either the SHOT annual meeting web page or the SHOT awards web page.

To inform the SHOT community about the state and developments of the history of technology in their regions, progress in disseminating information about the Society and stimulating scholarly activities in the history of technology, International Scholars commit themselves to at least one publication in the SHOT Newsletter or on the SHOT web site.

The deadline for nominations is April 15.

For more information, please contact Harro Maat, committee chair (Harro.Maat@wur.nl) or Bernie Carlson, SHOT Secretary (shot@virginia.edu).

2009 International Outreach Committee

Chandra D. Bhimull
Anthropology and African-American Studies
Colby College, USA
cbhimull@colby.edu

Dagmara Jajesniak-Quast
Geschichte Ostmitteleuropas
Universität Erfurt, Germany
dagmara.jajesniak-quast@uni-erfurt.de

Harro Maat (chair)
Wageningen University
Hollandseweg 1
Wageningen 6706 KN
Netherlands
harro.maat@wur.nl
Jin Hee Park
Center of General Education
Dongguk University, Korea
park0227@dongguk.edu

Jahnavi Phalkey
Centre for the History of Science, Technology and Medicine
Imperial College London, UK
j.phalkey@imperial.ac.uk

Antonio Pérez Yuste
Professor of Telecommunication Engineering
Technical University of Madrid, Spain
antonio.perez@upm.es

For more information, please contact the committee chair or Bernie Carlson, SHOT Secretary, 434.975.2190, shot@virginia.edu.

Current International Scholars

2009-2010

Manyong Moon (South Korea)
Dong Lili (China)
Francisco Platas Lopez (Mexico)
Yasushi Sato (Japan)
2008-2009 Katya Girschik (Switzerland)
Seong-Jun Kim (Korea)
Hugo Palmarola (Chile)
Srinivasa Rao (India)

Previous International Scholars

2007-2008

Stathis Arapostathis (UK/Greece)
Diana Covell (Australia)
Richard Escalante (Trinidad)
Dagmara Jajesniak-Quast (Germany)
Slawomir Lotysz (Poland)
Germuska Pál (Hungary)
2005-2007 Irene Anastasiadou (Greece and the Netherlands)
Keith Breckenridge (South Africa)
Cyrille Foasso (France)
Finn Arne Jorgensen (Norway)
Patrick Kammerer (Switzerland)
Tae-Ho Kim (South Korea)
Vincent Lagendijk (the Netherlands)
Frank Schipper (the Netherlands

The Society for the History of Technology
C/O Department of Science, Technology & Society; University of Virginia
PO Box 400744; Charlottesville, VA 22904-4744
tel or fax: 1.434.975.2190 (please put "for SHOT" on your fax)
Copyright © 2009 Society for the History of Technology Additional contact information