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NEWS AND ANNOUNCEMENTS

The WHA Office often receives notifications about awards, scholarships, fellowships, and events that might be of interest to our members. We are also happy to share the news and accomplishments of individual members and programs.


When our staff receives requests to post news and announcements, you will find them here and on our social media platforms. Please email us if you wish to be included in our news and announcements feed! 

  • Thursday, May 04, 2023 3:01 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Historian II

    The Montana Historical Society seeks an energetic and talented person for the position of Historian. If you believe that understanding the past is imperative to creating the future, you may find this position is a good fit. At the Montana Historical Society, we are striving to make our work environment a supportive and engaging place to foster work/life balance.

    This position participates in the development of a wide range of multi-disciplinary projects and products for the Society which interpret and preserve Montana’s and the West’s social, political, and physical history. Duties include but are not limited to:

    ·      Conducting extensive and complex research on historical sites.

    ·      Writing interesting, engaging, and accurate interpretive text that is accessible to the general public. The Historian will primarily write interpretive signs for National Register properties but may also be asked to write text for websites, curriculum materials, community guidebooks, books, newspapers, and magazines.

    ·      Evaluating and critiquing historical materials for accuracy, appropriateness, and absence of inappropriate bias.

    ·      Assisting with the production of public programming, anniversaries, and awards, including but not limited to planning and guiding historical tours, the annual MT History Conference, Heritage Keeper Awards, and the Gallery of Outstanding Montanans.

    ·      Engaging in public outreach at MHS, in collaboration with museums and cultural institutions across the state, and on social media.

    ·      Creating topical public history projects.

    ·      Answering questions for the general public, as well as for museum and historical society staff at institutions around the state. 

    ·      Maintaining the Historicmt.org website. 

     Qualifications

    ·      Knowledge of Montana and Western history, its patterns, themes, literature, historiography, authors, research sources, journals, organizations.

    ·      Knowledge of architectural history, heritage properties, and historical places.

    ·      Experience in creating complex, multi-disciplinary projects.

    ·      Excellent writing and communication skills, especially the ability to make complex ideas accessible to the general public.

    ·      Knowledge of historical research procedures, including work within both traditional written and oral sources, data gathering techniques and methods, historical analyses, and evaluations of historical biases.

    ·      Ability to quickly find and synthesize many different kinds of historical information, to see patterns, and to draw logical conclusions, including about sources’ accuracy and biases.

    ·      Excellent customer service and enthusiasm for working with the public and diverse constituents.

    ·      Excellent public presentation skills.

    ·      Ability to establish and maintain effective professional working relationships. 

    ·      Ability to work well with a team, both as a leader and as contributing member.

    ·      Commitment to public history (and an understanding of how it differs from academic history).

    Must have a master's degree in history, public history, preservation, Native American Studies, American Studies, or related field, or commensurate experience. 

    3 years' experience.

    Finalists will be requested to take a writing test. 

    Salary $24.90 - $26.40 hourly

    Closes midnight Thursday May 18, 2023

    To apply complete a State of Montana Application and attach a cover letter.

    Home (mt.gov)


  • Wednesday, May 03, 2023 9:14 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Job Title: H. Russell Smith Foundation Curator of Western American History

    Organization: The Huntington Library, Art Museum and Botanical Gardens

     

    About the Role

    The Huntington Library seeks a Curator of Western American History to serve as a creative and collaborative professional in stewarding, developing, and interpreting its exceptional collection of manuscripts, rare books, photographs, and maps pertaining to the history of the trans-Mississippi West. The collections in this area have been thoughtfully developed over the last century and remain a major focus of the institution. The Library holds 400 manuscript collections that pertain to the West, as well as hundreds of thousands of printed and graphic items.

     

    The Curator of Western American History is part of the Library’s unified Curatorial Department staff. S/he/they report to the Head of the Library Curatorial Department and will work closely with other curators with intersecting collection areas and scholarly expertise, including those in the Huntington’s Art Museum.

     

    The collections in this area geographically extend from Alaska and the Canadian Northwest, south to the borderlands of the United States and Mexico, and across the continent from the Mississippi and throughout the Pacific Rim. Chronologically, resources span the 16th century to the early 21st. The topical and thematic strengths of the collections relate to missionary practices among Indigenous populations; immigrant diasporas and populations; overland migration and settler colonial exploration and settler impulses; warfare and violence; and Latter-Day Saint migrations to the Intermountain and Far West, as well as into the Pacific. Materials on mining, water, the gold rush, railroads, corporate histories, banking and finance, migrations, and demography record the growth of urban and suburban centers in the West. Recent collecting concentrates on the transformation of the West in response to tourism, recreation, and leisure across the last century and a half.

     

    The Huntington welcomes over one million visitors each year to its gardens, art galleries, and library exhibition halls, while also facilitating one of the largest scholarly fellowship programs in the United States. The Library’s reading rooms welcome 1700 visitors conducting research in the collections each year, with some 300 readers working in the field of Western American History. The successful candidate will demonstrate a background of working directly with people from diverse racial, ethnic, geographic and socioeconomic backgrounds, using a welcoming, inclusive, and accessible approach. The successful applicant will also demonstrate an understanding of the role of special collection resources in contemporary scholarship, as well as an aptitude for the focused acquisition of collection materials in this field, and their imaginative interpretation through public exhibition for diverse audiences.

     

    Essential Duties

    • Stewards and develops the Library’s extensive rare and special collections in Western American History through gift and purchase, and informs the development of the general reference collections in this area.
    • Interprets collections for the widest possible audiences (from scholars to the general public) through exhibitions, academic lectures, public talks, tours, conferences, publications, digital initiatives, and outreach activities.
    • Provides research and reference assistance for the collection to users (in person and electronically) and participates in the review of Huntington fellowship applications for appropriateness to the collections.
    • Works with Library Directory, Advancement staff, Library Director, and Head of Library Curatorial to identify and steward donors and to win and implement grants useful to the collections and the institution.
    • Works closely with the ACMe (Acquisitions, Cataloging & Metadata) team responsible for the creation of access tools on collection priorities and the appropriate level of description for catalog records and finding aids, based upon an understanding of the materials and scholarly and research needs.
    • Works with Reader Services to promote and develop tools to improve access and understanding of the collections, like LibGuides.
    • Establishes priorities and initiates projects for the preservation and conservation of collections, in collaboration with the Head of Preservation, Preservation staff, and the Head of Library Curatorial.
    • Advises colleagues in Education and Public Programs on appropriate interpretation of content and participates in programs across the institution.
    • Keeps current with relevant historiographical concerns, issues, developments, and trends in professional communities.
    • Represents the Library and contributes to appropriate professional organizations at the local, regional, national, and international levels.
    • Contributes to departmental, division, and institution-wide activities and initiatives in collaboration with colleagues and support staff.

     

    Candidate Requirements and Experience

    Knowledge, skills, and abilities:

    • Specific subject knowledge of the histories of the American West usually obtained through a PhD (preferred) or advanced degree in a relevant discipline (History, American Studies, Anthropology, etc.)
    • Demonstrated experience conducting advanced research with archival collections and primary sources.
    • Familiarity with library and archival standards, experience with copyright, and managing restricted collections, obtained through an MLIS degree or equivalent experience.
    • Knowledge of the rare book and manuscript trade.
    • Excellent organizational, analytical, oral, and written communication skills, including public speaking skills.
    • Reading knowledge of a non-English language relevant to the region and history of the American West.
    • Understanding of preservation issues common in special collection libraries.
    • Ability to effectively prioritize competing tasks and excel in a fast-passed, demanding, and engaging research library with a public mission.
    • Strong interpersonal skills and the ability to work with a diverse group of colleagues, researchers, donors, and other individuals and communities.
    • Demonstrated collegiality, professional contributions, and a record of collaboration.

    Experience:

    • A minimum of 5 years of professional work experience in special collections or a research library.
    • Experience in acquiring rare materials.
    • Experience with digitization and digital humanities projects.
    • An established record of scholarly and professional contributions.

     

    Working Conditions

    • Normal office environment.
    • Some weekend and evening work is required.
    • Some travel, locally, nationally, and internationally is required.

     

    Compensation & Benefits

    We provide competitive compensation, generous benefits and perks for all eligible employees including:

    • Pay Range: $85-90k annually. Negotiable and commensurate on experience.
    • Medical, Dental, Vision
    • 403(b) basic retirement plan and optional matching retirement plan with an outstanding employer match
    • Hybrid remote work schedule available for applicable positions
    • Considerable paid time off, including annual leave, sick leave, and holidays
    • Discounts for staff in The Huntington Store and restaurants
    • Access to the Museums Council pass, which grants free admission to various museums and cultural institutions
    • Free passes each month to welcome family and friends to visit the grounds

     

    The Application Process

    Visit us at https://huntington.org/careers to apply directly.

    Please submit a cover letter and CV/resume as a single PDF attachment. 

    You will have the opportunity to submit additional documents on the “My Experience” section of the application


  • Monday, April 10, 2023 2:26 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    WESTFORD, Massachusetts – The Art Libraries Society of North America (ARLIS/NA) announces historic support from The Samuel H. Kress Foundation and The Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation to fund attendee travel to the society’s 51st annual conference from April 18-21, 2023, in Mexico City, Mexico.

     

    A milestone occasion for the ARLIS/NA, this is the first time the society will meet outside Canada or the United States. Members of the Conference Planning Advisory Committee recognized the increased need for travel support above and beyond the existing travel awards program and secured $15,000 from the Kress Foundation and $12,000 from the Delmas Foundation. Support from the Kress Foundation will provide thirty $500 awards for conference participants, and support from the Delmas Foundation will offer sixteen $750 awards for new members, first-time conference attendees, or attendees from Latin America.

     

    This is the first time the society has received foundation funding for a single conference with the objectives of expanding the organization's reach and increasing access to art-related bibliographic resources across the Americas.

     

    Read the full release: https://www.arlisna.org/press-releases

    Contact:

    Larry Eames

    Media Editor

    719.255.3929

    media.relations@arlisna.org


  • Friday, April 07, 2023 12:57 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Job Opportunity: Director, Center for Southwest Research and Special Collections

     

    Position Summary

    The University of New Mexico College of University Libraries and Learning Sciences (CULLS) seeks a skilled, enthusiastic, service-oriented leader to fill the position of Director of the Center for Southwest Research and Special Collections (CSWR). This senior management position will articulate strategic leadership, clear vision, and direction for the CSWR; forge dynamic partnerships with academic departments, local communities, and regional, national, and international cultural organizations; advance a workplace culture that is collaborative, productive, empowering, and mutually respectful; cultivate and steward donors; and provide expertise in the acquisition, processing, management, and preservation of unique collections and archival materials in a variety of physical and digital formats.

    This is a full-time, 12-month faculty position with a minimum hiring salary of $82,000 and generous benefits. Faculty rank (Assistant Professor or Associate Professor), tenure status, and salary are negotiable based on qualifications and experience. This position reports to the Associate Dean of Digital Scholarship and Collections. Prioritizing a diverse, equitable, and inclusive organization, the College strongly encourages interested candidates who are members of minoritized or marginalized groups to inquire or apply.  

    The CSWR specializes in interdisciplinary subjects relating to New Mexico, the Greater Southwest, Mexico, and Latin America and includes the University Archives. Its collection strengths include Native American, Chicano/Hispano, Spanish Colonial, and environmental design history. The CSWR recently adopted the Protocols for Native American Archival Material. The CSWR’s activities are supported by 10 full-time faculty and staff. The department also works closely with campus units such as the Center for Regional Studies and the Latin American & Iberian Institute to employ graduate fellows. The Director must be familiar with and committed to ethical practices in decision-making, have relevant skills, experience, and knowledge of professional principles and practices relating to materials found in special collections.

    The director is responsible for the stewardship and promotion of the CSWR’s collections and must possess strong, innovative leadership, collaboration and communication skills, and they must have proven expertise in special collections and archives.  The candidate will have a demonstrated commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion and will have a willingness to partner within the Libraries and across the University. The Director will work closely with the Dean and Director of Development to cultivate and steward donors and ensure gifts are processed and recorded with the UNM Foundation.

    The University Environment 

    Founded in 1889, the University of New Mexico sits on the traditional homelands of the Pueblo of Sandia. The original peoples of New Mexico – Pueblo, Navajo, and Apache – since time immemorial, have deep connections to the land and have made significant contributions to the broader community statewide. We honor the land itself and those who remain stewards of this land throughout the generations and acknowledge our committed relationship to Indigenous peoples. We gratefully recognize our history.  

    UNM is a Tier I Research Institution, a Hispanic-serving institution, and the flagship university in a majority minority state. To support UNM’s diverse campus constituents and colleagues, the College affirms its commitment to honor diversity, ensure fairness and access, and create an environment where all employees are treated respectfully. These commitments include supporting the University and CULLS’ JEADI initiatives and the College’s Anti-Racism statement.

    UNM is a member of the Association of Research Libraries, Center for Research Libraries, and the Greater Western Library Alliance and leads the LIBROS Consortium of seventeen academic libraries in New Mexico. The College is comprised of the University Libraries, an academic degree granting unit (Organization, Information, and Learning Sciences), and the University of New Mexico Press. The UNM Libraries contain over 3.5 million volumes and includes three libraries: Centennial Science & Engineering Library, Fine Arts & Design Library, and Zimmerman Library (humanities, social sciences, business, and education). Zimmerman Library houses the Center for Southwest Research and Special Collections. UNM is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer and educator.  

    Why Albuquerque? https://advance.unm.edu/why-abq/

    Minimum qualifications

    • An earned master’s degree from an ALA-accredited library/information sciences program or equivalent, or an earned doctorate.
    • Five years of progressively responsible experience working with special collections, rare books, archives, or digital collections.
    • Three years of management experience.

    Preferred qualifications  

     Applicants with any combination of the following interests or desirable qualifications are encouraged to apply.

    • Advanced degree in the humanities, social sciences, or public history.
    • Evidence of scholarly engagement with the history and culture of the Southwest U.S. and/or Latin America.
    • Knowledge and experience in applying efficient processing techniques in accessing, appraising, arranging, describing, digitizing, and preserving archival collections of varying size and complexity.
    • Understanding and ability to stay abreast of privacy, confidentiality, copyright, and use policies associated with archives and special collection materials.
    • Demonstrated initiative and proven ability to learn new technologies and adapt to changes in the profession.
    • Evidence of effectively leading and managing a special collections department in an academic/research library and successfully supervising faculty (or professional equivalent), staff, and graduate students.
    • Evidence of experience with cultivating and stewarding donors, fundraising, and grant management.
    • Experience working with faculty, students, and scholars to support their research and instructional endeavors and community outreach, exhibit development, and public programming.
    • Knowledge of Spanish or an Indigenous language of the greater Southwest.
    • Evidence of effective communication, interpersonal, conflict management, and problem-solving skills.
    • Record of librarianship/teaching, scholarship, and service to support appointment as an Associate Professor or Professor.
    • Demonstrated commitment to diversity, equity, inclusion, and student success as well as working with broadly diverse communities. 

    Application Instructions

    For additional information and to apply please visit UNM Jobs:  https://unm.csod.com/ux/ats/careersite/18/home/requisition/24796

    For best consideration, please apply by April 26, 2023. This position will remain open until filled


  • Wednesday, April 05, 2023 7:42 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The Huntington Library posted a new job position for H. Russell Smith Foundation Curator of Western American History. For full information, check out their website. 


    Job Description

    About the Role

    The Huntington Library seeks a Curator of Western American History to serve as a creative and collaborative professional in stewarding, developing, and interpreting its exceptional collection of manuscripts, rare books, photographs, and maps pertaining to the history of the trans-Mississippi West. The collections in this area have been thoughtfully developed over the last century and remain a major focus of the institution. The Library holds 400 manuscript collections that pertain to the West, as well as hundreds of thousands of printed and graphic items.

    The Curator of Western American History is part of the Library’s unified Curatorial Department staff. S/he/they report to the Head of the Library Curatorial Department and will work closely with other curators with intersecting collection areas and scholarly expertise, including those in the Huntington’s Art Museum.

    The collections in this area geographically extend from Alaska and the Canadian Northwest, south to the borderlands of the United States and Mexico, and across the continent from the Mississippi and throughout the Pacific Rim. Chronologically, resources span the 16th century to the early 21st. The topical and thematic strengths of the collections relate to missionary practices among Indigenous populations; immigrant diasporas and populations; overland migration and settler colonial exploration and settler impulses; warfare and violence; and Latter-Day Saint migrations to the Intermountain and Far West, as well as into the Pacific. Materials on mining, water, the gold rush, railroads, corporate histories, banking and finance, migrations, and demography record the growth of urban and suburban centers in the West. Recent collecting concentrates on the transformation of the West in response to tourism, recreation, and leisure across the last century and a half.

    The Huntington welcomes over one million visitors each year to its gardens, art galleries, and library exhibition halls, while also facilitating one of the largest scholarly fellowship programs in the United States. The Library’s reading rooms welcome 1700 visitors conducting research in the collections each year, with some 300 readers working in the field of Western American History. The successful candidate will demonstrate a background of working directly with people from diverse racial, ethnic, geographic and socioeconomic backgrounds, using a welcoming, inclusive, and accessible approach. The successful applicant will also demonstrate an understanding of the role of special collection resources in contemporary scholarship, as well as an aptitude for the focused acquisition of collection materials in this field, and their imaginative interpretation through public exhibition for diverse audiences.

    Essential Duties

    • Stewards and develops the Library’s extensive rare and special collections in Western American History through gift and purchase, and informs the development of the general reference collections in this area.

    • Interprets collections for the widest possible audiences (from scholars to the general public) through exhibitions, academic lectures, public talks, tours, conferences, publications, digital initiatives, and outreach activities.

    • Provides research and reference assistance for the collection to users (in person and electronically) and participates in the review of Huntington fellowship applications for appropriateness to the collections.

    • Works with Library Directory, Advancement staff, Library Director, and Head of Library Curatorial to identify and steward donors and to win and implement grants useful to the collections and the institution.

    • Works closely with the ACMe (Acquisitions, Cataloging & Metadata) team responsible for the creation of access tools on collection priorities and the appropriate level of description for catalog records and finding aids, based upon an understanding of the materials and scholarly and research needs.

    • Works with Reader Services to promote and develop tools to improve access and understanding of the collections, like LibGuides.

    • Establishes priorities and initiates projects for the preservation and conservation of collections, in collaboration with the Head of Preservation, Preservation staff, and the Head of Library Curatorial.

    • Advises colleagues in Education and Public Programs on appropriate interpretation of content and participates in programs across the institution.

    • Keeps current with relevant historiographical concerns, issues, developments, and trends in professional communities.

    • Represents the Library and contributes to appropriate professional organizations at the local, regional, national, and international levels.

    • Contributes to departmental, division, and institution-wide activities and initiatives in collaboration with colleagues and support staff.

    Candidate Requirements and Experience

    Knowledge, skills, and abilities:

    • Specific subject knowledge of the histories of the American West usually obtained through a

    • PhD (preferred) or advanced degree in a relevant discipline (History, American Studies, Anthropology, etc.)

    • Demonstrated experience conducting advanced research with archival collections and primary sources.

    • Familiarity with library and archival standards, experience with copyright, and managing restricted collections, obtained through an MLIS degree or equivalent experience.

    • Knowledge of the rare book and manuscript trade.

    • Excellent organizational, analytical, oral, and written communication skills, including public speaking skills.

    • Reading knowledge of a non-English language relevant to the region and history of the American West.

    • Understanding of preservation issues common in special collection libraries.

    • Ability to effectively prioritize competing tasks and excel in a fast-passed, demanding, and engaging research library with a public mission.

    • Strong interpersonal skills and the ability to work with a diverse group of colleagues, researchers, donors, and other individuals and communities.

    • Demonstrated collegiality, professional contributions, and a record of collaboration.

    Experience:

    • A minimum of 5 years of professional work experience in special collections or a research library.

    • Experience in acquiring rare materials.

    • Experience with digitization and digital humanities projects.

    • An established record of scholarly and professional contributions.

    Working Conditions

    • Normal office environment.

    • Some weekend and evening work is required.

    • Some travel, locally, nationally, and internationally is required.

    Compensation & Benefits

    We provide competitive compensation, generous benefits and perks for all eligible employees including:

    • Pay Range: $85-90k annually. Negotiable and commensurate on experience.

    • Medical, Dental, Vision

    • 403(b) basic retirement plan and optional matching retirement plan with an outstanding employer match

    • Hybrid remote work schedule available for applicable positions

    • Considerable paid time off, including annual leave, sick leave, and holidays

    • Discounts for staff in The Huntington Store and restaurants

    • Access to the Museums Council pass, which grants free admission to various museums and cultural institutions

    • Free passes each month to welcome family and friends to visit the grounds

    The Application Process

    Please submit a cover letter and CV/resume as a single PDF attachment. 

    You will have the opportunity to submit additional documents on the “My Experience” section of the application


  • Tuesday, March 28, 2023 11:30 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The Transnation & Global History Seminar (TGHS) at the University of Oxford has a call for papers (abstract deadline April 15) for their annual graduate conference. The conference topic is "Diaspora, Identity and Belonging" and it will be held on June 5-6 in Oxford and online. The conference will engage with diasporic histories and identities as a way to disrupt the fiction of geopolitical borders, unsettle the nation as a unit of analysis, and destabilise colonial logic which coerces (dis)placement. TGHS invites our fellow graduate and early career historians and scholars in adjacent disciplines to apply.


    For more information, go to: https://www.oxfordtghs.com/conference


  • Friday, March 17, 2023 11:11 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Nebraska State College System has a Tenure Track History faculty position available! The job is in Chadron, Nebraska.

    For more information, visit their website: https://nscs.peopleadmin.com/postings/10579.

    Job Title History Faculty
    Rank To be determined based on qualifications
    Tenure Information Tenure Track
    Nature of Work

    Full-time faculty in the Justice Studies, Social Sciences & English Department with primary teaching emphasis in United States History, American Indian Studies, the North American West, Nebraska History,and related areas as assigned by the Dean. The faculty member participates in the department and the institution’s communities of learners to foster a culture of inquiry, critical self-reflection, evidence-based decision-making, and a learner-centered environment.

    Examples of Work Performed

    General Summary: Responsible for providing instruction in accordance with the philosophy and objectives of the College.

    Essential Duties:
    1. Contribute to students’ academic growth and development, which includes all of the following.
    A. Teaching, which includes but is not limited to the following:
    i. Have knowledge of and enthusiasm for the subject
    ii. Maintain competence in the assigned field of specialization and exhibit professional competence in the classroom, studio or laboratory
    iii. Maintain a classroom environment conducive to learning
    iv. Maintain respect for the student and the student’s posture as a learner
    v. Organize course and subject matter to acquaint all students with the course requirements including specific objectives, and methods of evaluation
    vi. Organize course presentations through short-term and long-range outcomes
    vii. Present abstract ideas and theories clearly
    viii. Conduct classroom presentations and activities utilizing methods appropriate to reach students of varying educational/experiential backgrounds and learning styles
    ix. Actively engage students in lectures, discussions or laboratories
    x. Coordinate handouts, video and/or online materials and/or articles to update course content
    xi. Incorporate new methodologies in teaching and technology into classes
    xii. Encourage student to think for themselves
    xiii. Be flexible and innovative with teaching styles and approaches, as appropriate to the class
    xiv. Be reliable in meeting scheduled responsibilities
    xv. Be accessible to students; post and maintain office hours
    xvi. Provide regular and timely assessment of student progress
    xvii. Be fair in examinations and grading
    xviii. Participate in program assessment and catalog revisions
    xix. Periodically evaluate and develop new courses, where necessary, revise and update existing courses to maintain relevant and current content.
    xx. Participate in program review and updating requirements

    B. Advising students, which includes but is not limited to the following:
    i. Be knowledgeable about college policies and program requirements
    ii. Help students plan programs of study
    iii. Provide students with advice on academic issues and career counseling, tutoring, and other academic support resources
    iv. Assist in the development, implementation, and assessment of the departmental enrollment management plan, including serving directly in student recruitment, retention, and success strategies
    v. Schedule and maintain availability for student advising
    vi. Establish and maintain timely communication with advisees
    vii. Provide leadership and supervision for student organizations and activities

    2. Professional achievement and continual preparation and study through scholarly and creative activity will vary according to the field, examples of which may include the following:
    A. Participate in academic organizations related to teaching assignment
    B. Give scholarly presentations, workshops or performances
    C. Produce scholarly materials such as original or applied research, manuscripts, articles, book reviews, musical arrangements, or works of art
    D. Engage in appropriate professional development to enhance performance as faculty member
    E. Seek external funding through approved grant and contract work related to discipline, as appropriate and assigned
    F. Provide evidence of achievement within and significance of contributions to field
    G. Provide evidence of quality and originality of thought or work and breadth and depth of perspective
    H. Be willing and able to continue individual development and professional productivity as a member of the faculty.

    3. Professional services rendered outside the academic discipline in ways other than teaching that contribute to the work of the College vary from individual to individual. Service to the college and community, and profession related to the professional assignment includes the following:
    A. Participate in campus and community presentations
    B. Serve on discipline, department, school, and campus-wide committees and initiatives
    C. Take an active role in discipline, departmental, and school accreditation and reaccreditation activities, as appropriate and as assigned
    D. Periodically evaluate and develop new courses, where necessary, consistent with the role and mission of the institution, school and department
    E. Sponsor student organizations, as appropriate and assigned, and participate in student-based activities
    F. Provide leadership in professional organizations and/or good citizenship in the community at large
    G. Foster and sustain collegial relations with campus, community and profession

    Secondary Duties:
    Other duties as assigned by Dean

    Required Qualifications

    Ph.D. in History or closely related field; ABD considered
    (terminal degree required for tenure)

    Preferred Qualifications

    Experience teaching at the high school and/or college level
    Experience in research/scholarship
    Experience in effectively using technology to facilitate student learning and to expand student access
    Interest in teacher education/Social Studies standards
    Ability to contribute to the CSC Essential Studies Program
    Additional US History subfields (i.e., environmental history, colonial history, immigration and ethnic history, Western women’s history, etc.) welcomed

    License and Certification Requirements

    None

    Other Requirements

    Successful background records check

    Salary Information $54,343-TBD
    FTE

    1.000

    FLSA Exempt
    Union Status SCEA
    Number of Vacancies 1



  • Thursday, February 09, 2023 1:48 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The ARLIS/NA Mountain West chapter has opened the registration for their symposium. The symposium will take place on February 24 at 12:00 MT. The link to register is here: https://uccs-edu.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJUrdu-urzsvGNyhpVkD_lt_SLktoNyBy0YR

  • Thursday, February 09, 2023 1:40 PM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    Job Title: CURATOR 3
    CURATOR 3 – Requisition ID: 17118
    Recruitment Type: Open Competitive
    Posting Close Date: N/A
    Geographical Location: Reno, Sparks

    Department: DEPARTMENT OF TOURISM AND CULTURAL AFFAIRS
    Division: DTCA – MUSEUMS AND HISTORY DIVISION
    Business Unit: HR-NEVADA HISTORICAL SOCIETY
    Work Type: PERMANENT
    *Pay Grade: GRADE 35
    Salary Range: $51,803.28 – $76,921.92
    Full-Time/Part-Time: Full Time

    Recruiter: ADRIAN L FOSTER
    Phone: 702 486-2911
    Email: adrian@admin.nv.gov

    Position Description:
    The Nevada Historical Society (NHS) in the Division of Museums and History within the Department of Tourism and Cultural Affairs is seeking a qualified candidate for the position of the Nevada Historical Society Q (NHSQ) Editor (Curator III). The NHS is an educational institution and public history center that incorporates the functions of a research library and archive, a museum, public programs venue, academic research, and educational offerings for all ages.

    The Editor, working under the direction of the NHS Director, oversees the publication of the Nevada Historical Society Q, the only academic, peer-reviewed journal dedicated to Nevada History. The NHSQ is in the process of moving to a hybrid digital/print publication and the Editor will be helping migrate the NHSQ to an online access journal.

    The job duties include coordinating online and print publishing cycles, managing content areas, upholding publication standards, establishing goals and expectations, actively seeking articles and content, coordinating work of subcontractors, proofreading, editing, and improving articles, checking content for accuracy and errors, complying with media law and ethical guidelines, meeting deadlines and budget requirements.

    In addition, this position develops education programs working in conjunction with NHS programming and curators, schedules guided tours, school tours and outreach to schools and community organizations. The incumbent supervises, recruits, and trains interns, docents, and volunteers.

    The Editor plays an active role in the day-to-day operations of the NHS. The incumbent can expect to spend part of their time in work that sustains the Nevada Historical Society’s public services and advances the overall mission and strategic plan of the Nevada Historical Society.

    This includes managing visitors; developing new initiatives; assistance with grant-writing; maintaining and creating accurate data using agency software and databases including PastPerfect; operating admissions and museum store when needed; and other duties as assigned.

    Minimum Qualifications
    Bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university with major coursework in history, prehistory, natural history, museum studies, education, or closely related field plus three years of professional experience in a museum.

    This experience must have included direct responsibility for museum collections involving the preparation of exhibit text regarding complex technical information, and/or developing, promoting, executing and evaluating educational programming; OR one year of experience as a Curator II in Nevada State service; OR an equivalent combination of education and experience as described above.

    The Examination
    Application Evaluation Exam
    The exam will consist of an application and resume evaluation. It is essential that applications/resumes include detailed information with time frames regarding education and experience. The most qualified applicants will be contacted by the hiring agency for interview. The hiring agency may require specific skills related testing as part of the interviewing process.

    Special Requirements
    Working outdoors is required.
    Working nights, weekends, and holidays required.
    This position has a 25 % travel requirement.
    A pre-employment criminal history check and fingerprinting are required. Persons offered employment in this position will be required to pay for these items.

    This recruitment may close at any time based on the number of applications received. Qualified applicants are encouraged to apply as soon as possible.

    *The salary range indicated in this announcement is based on the Employee/Employer retirement compensation schedule. An employer-only option is available at a reduced salary range.

    The State of Nevada is committed to Equal Employment Opportunity/Affirmative Action in recruitment of its employees and does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion or belief, age, disability, sex, sexual orientation, gender identity or expression, pregnancy, domestic partnership, genetic information (GINA), or compensation and/or wages.

  • Wednesday, February 01, 2023 10:23 AM | Anonymous member (Administrator)

    The Arizona History Convention

    Holds its First Hybrid Conference

    April 13-15, 2023

    This year’s lineup will feature nearly 100 presenters speaking on a wide range of topics including climate change and the environment, civil rights and citizenship, race and gender, Arizona’s Indigenous people, historic preservation, border policy and immigration, the state’s musical and photographic heritage, law and politics, urban development, and boosterism.

    Scholars from universities in Arizona, Oklahoma, Tennessee, California, and New York, as well as local avocational historians, archivists, museum professionals, and librarians will be presenting their latest findings.

    The online portion of the program will be held April 13 and 14; the in-person conference will take place Saturday April 15 at the Tempe Community Center, located on the southwest corner of Rural and Southern.

    The full program and registration information are now available on our website: https://arizonahistory.org/2023-convention

    For more information or to arrange an interview, please email us at info@arizonahistory.org or contact Ken Leja at Ken.leja@gmail.com (928) 830-8236

    Here are a few highlights from this year’s program:

    • Shelly Lowe, chair of the National Endowment for the Humanities and citizen of the Navajo Nation, will give the keynote address.
    • Dr. Maurice Crandall, Arizona State University and a citizen of the Yavapai-Apache Nation of Camp Verde, will give the plenary speech, titled, “Voices from the Past, Lessons for the Future: Indigenous Arizona.” His talk is sponsored by ASU’s School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies.
    • Experts will discuss two of Arizona’s most notorious cold cases—the Wickenburg Massacre and the Don Bolles murder investigation.
    • We’ll be screening three documentary films providing new perspectives on some of Arizona’s iconic roads, including a new PBS series:

    “Route 66: The Untold Story of Women on the Mother Road” 

    https://www.documentary.org/project/route-66-women-untold-story-mother-road

    • Many award-winning authors will be presenting, including:

    John Boessenecker, Wildcat: The Untold Story of Pearl Hart, the Wild West's Most Notorious Woman Bandit

    https://www.historynet.com/wildcat-book-review-john-boessenecker-sifts-reality-from-the-mythical-life-of-outlaw-pearl-hart/

    Jim Kristofic, Medicine Women: The Story of the First Native American Nursing School

    https://www.unmpress.com/9780826360670/medicine-women/

    James McGrath Morris, Tony Hillerman: A Life

    https://jamesmcgrathmorris.com/

    Tom Zoellner, Rim to River: Looking into the Heart of Arizona

    https://uapress.arizona.edu/book/rim-to-river

    Wynne Brown, The Forgotten Botanist: Sarah Plummer Lemmon’s Life of Science and Art

    https://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/bison-books/9781496222817/



Western History Association

University of Kansas | History Department

1445 Jayhawk Blvd. | 3650 Wescoe Hall

Lawrence, KS 66045 | 785-864-0860

wha@westernhistory.org 


The WHA is located in the Department of History at the University of Kansas. The WHA is grateful to KU's History Department and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences for their generous support!