Women of the Channel WestĬoverage from The Channel Company's event held May 16 to 17, 2016 in Napa Valley, CA. Introducing Women of the Channel Online, a place where women across the IT channel can connect to share perspectives on life and work. Women of the Channel executives say that mentoring, creating a personal brand, and promoting a flexible office environment will help close the gap for good. Mind The Gap: Execs Say Gender Gap In IT Is Closing, But Work Isn't Done Yet Female Role Models I AdmireĬRN asked this year's Women of the Channel to identify their female role models, and their answers were as varied as the honorees themselves. Advice For The Next GenerationĬRN asked the Women of the Channel honorees of today to offer some advice for the female channel leaders of tomorrow. How I Achieve Work-Life BalanceĬRN asked the 2016 Women of the Channel to shed a little light on how they strive to achieve an optimal work-life balance. Up-And-ComersĬRN gives special recognition to 23 rising-star female executives. Power 100: The Most Powerful Women Of The Channel, Part 1 Power 100: Part 2 Power 30 Solution ProvidersĬRN is highlighting 30 female executives at solution provider organizations whose insight and influence drive channel success. The overall theme of the SSPC meeting will be “Practices that Harm/Practices that Heal.” For the joint day, we are especially interested in showcasing work in psychological anthropology and cultural psychiatry that addresses issues of healing and transformation.This year, CRN honors nearly 500 women whose channel expertise and vision are deserving of recognition. This joint day will allow SPA members, researchers, and practitioners to discuss cross-cutting interests and the underpinnings and consequences of social experience for mental health, psychiatric disorders, and healing. Long awaited by both societies, this day of overlap is aimed at fostering cross-discipline engagement. The 2023 SPA meeting will include a joint conference day with the Society for the Study of Psychiatry and Culture (SSPC), an interdisciplinary group devoted to clinical issues in culture and mental health. We especially encourage interdisciplinary work that bridges anthropology, psychology, psychiatry, and allied disciplines to explore the dynamics of healthy and pathological ecologies of mind. We invite papers and presentations that engage with the enduring questions of psychological anthropology and current social, political, and existential predicaments. This meeting will explore ecologies of mind in diverse domains and at multiple scales from local communities to planetary networks, from embodied realities to virtual worlds. The recognition that human psychology has its own ecology and dynamics that depend on local niches and networks as well as on wider social systems is urgently needed to help us address the most pressing challenges of our time: climate change and ecocide systemic racism and structural violence social polarization and the erosion of trust in civil society and democratic institutions and the colonization of imagination and epistemic chaos created by commercial and political manipulation of social media. This ecological perspective provides a shared genealogy and bridge between the concerns of psychological anthropology and contemporary approaches in cognitive science, which see human experience as emerging from embodied, enacted, embedded and extended social processes. Gregory Bateson’s concept of an ecology of mind pointed to ways of thinking about mind as situated in both interpersonal and larger social systems. Psychological anthropology is rooted in recognition of the social constitution of mind, self and person. However, you can still register via SSPC at Please Note: Registration for the SPA/SSPC joint meeting is closed via AAA.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |