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IATL’s Early Career Teaching Fellowship

What is the IATL/IAS Early Career Teaching Fellowship?

IATL (Institute for Advanced Teaching and Learning) and IAS (Institute for Advanced Study) offer PGRs at Warwick the opportunity to apply for an Early Career Teaching Fellowship to support their transition to postdoctoral work and to expand their interdisciplinary practice. The programme runs annually from October through to July and allows PGRs (who have either just finished or are about to finish their PhD) to get involved in a range of activities within IATL and IAS.

Early Career Teaching Fellows have the opportunity to shadow IATL staff members, participate in IATL’s Postgraduate Award in Interdisciplinary Pedagogy, contribute to student engagement, and deliver their own pedagogical project.

We spoke to Fraser Logan and Adam Neal, two of IATL’s Early Career Teaching Fellows, about their interdisciplinary work. Listen to our podcast to find out more.

 

Listen to our Podcast with Fraser and Adam

Fraser Logan

Fraser Logan was an IATL/IAS Early Career Teaching Fellow during the 2023/24 academic year. He received his PhD in Philosophy from the University of Warwick in 2023 with a thesis entitled “Nietzsche on Honesty”. He recently published a paper on the relationship between honesty and parrhēsia, the Cynic virtue of outspokenness. He is interested in unconventional forms of philosophical writing and has written a book of 800 original aphorisms: e.g., “No afterlife. Go after life”.

Go to his page.

Adam Neal

Adam Neal was an IATL/IAS Early Career Teaching Fellow during the 2023/24 academic year where he taught on the IATL module Global Connections. His Leverhulme Trust funded PhD thesis concerned the social and interpersonal implications of poverty and understanding poverty using the capability approach. He has published on the philosophy of work and the ethics of relationships. He has co-edited a collection on social rights published with Oxford University Press, as well as published on the impact of the UK Government’s COVID-19 response on people who live alone. He has also lectured on the Ethics of Sociability, and is a member of the Centre for Ethics, Law and Public Affairs.

Go to his page.

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