Skip to main content

This job has expired

Assistant Professors in Global Change Biology and Global Change Remote Sensing, Boston University

Employer
Boston University
Location
Boston
View more categoriesView less categories

Job Details



Assistant Professors in Global Change Biology and Global Change Remote Sensing, College of Arts & Sciences, Boston University

Tracking Code: 24599934970919

Job Description
Assistant Professors in Global Change Biology and Global Change Remote Sensing, College of Arts & Sciences, Boston University

Category
Charles River Campus --> Faculty
Job Location
BOSTON, Massachusetts
Tracking Code
24599934970919
Posted Date
9/19/2024
Position Type
Full-Time/Regular

The Departments of Biology and Earth & Environment at Boston University seek candidates for two tenure-track Assistant Professor positions: one in Global Change Biology and one in Global Change Remote Sensing, both starting July 1, 2025. These positions are part of a cluster hire initiative in Global Change & Sustainability led by Boston University's College of Arts & Sciences. Candidates whose work spans multiple disciplines in Global Change & Sustainability are preferred. The successful candidates will have appointments in the Department of Biology or Earth & Environment, with the option to have a joint or secondary appointment. We seek candidates that complement and broaden existing expertise in the Departments of Biology and Earth & Environment and the Center for Remote Sensing at Boston University, which includes faculty with research interests in atmospheric, marine, and terrestrial ecosystem processes. A key goal of this joint search is to deepen existing connections and collaborations between the departments of Biology and Earth & Environment, and we specifically seek candidates who will advance this goal.

Required Skills

For the Global Change Biology position we seek candidates whose research addresses fundamental questions about human-induced environmental change at the level of genes, organisms, communities, or ecosystems in terrestrial, marine, or freshwater systems. Any scale of inquiry is appropriate, from genes to the biosphere, with a focus on biotic interactions under environmental change.

For the Global Change Remote Sensing position we seek candidates whose research falls in any domain of Earth observation, including both active (radar, lidar) and passive (optical, thermal, microwave) remote sensing. The scientific focus for this position is open, including any thematic area related to physical, chemical, or biological function of the Earth system, such as processes in oceans, the atmosphere, on land, and in coupled human-natural systems. We particularly welcome candidates whose expertise complements existing strengths in global environmental change at Boston University.

Within the Departments of Biology and Earth & Environment, opportunities exist for collaboration in many subject areas, including ecology, evolution, marine biology, land change science, natural resource management, land surface processes, and hydrology. Additional opportunities exist for collaboration with colleagues in the Biogeoscience Program, Center for Remote Sensing, Computing & Data Sciences, Ecology, Behavior and Evolution group in the Department of Biology, Institute for Global Sustainability, Marine Science, Microbiome Initiative, National Emerging Infectious Diseases Laboratory (NEIDL), Pardee Center, URBAN Program, and across the Department of Environmental Health, among others.

Applicants must have a PhD in a relevant field and a strong publication record. The successful applicants will be expected to supervise graduate research in Ph.D. programs, teach in the Biology and/or Earth & Environment curriculum, and maintain an externally funded research program. BU is especially interested in candidates who, through their research, teaching, and service, will contribute to the diversity and excellence of the academic community.

DO NOT APPLY THROUGH THE BOSTON UNIVERSITY HR WEBSITE.

Review of applications for both positions will begin October 15, 2024. Please use AcademicJobsOnline (https://academicjobsonline.org/ajo/jobs/28479) to select the position of interest (Global Change Biology or Global Change Remote Sensing), then submit a cover letter, curriculum vitae, statements of research, teaching & mentorship, and three representative reprints. Please provide the names and contact information for three professional references. Inquiries can be addressed to Richard Primack (primack@bu.edu), Chair, Global Change Biology Search Committee; or Mark Friedl (friedl@bu.edu), Chair, Global Change Remote Sensing Search Committee, as appropriate. Please visit the following website for information about the Departments of Biology (http://www.bu.edu/biology/) and Earth & Environment (https://www.bu.edu/earth/).

BU conducts a background check on all final candidates for certain faculty and staff positions. The background check includes contacting the final candidate's current and previous employer(s) to ask whether, in the last seven years, there has been a substantiated finding of misconduct violating that employer's applicable sexual misconduct policies. To implement this process, the University requires a final candidate to complete and sign the form entitled “Authorization to Release Information” after execution of an offer letter.

We are an equal opportunity employer, and all qualified applicants will receive consideration for employment without regard to race, color, natural or protective hairstyle, religion, sex, age, national origin, physical or mental disability, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic information, military service, pregnancy or pregnancy-related condition, or because of marital, parental, or veteran status. We are a VEVRAA Federal Contractor.


Job Location: BOSTON, MA
Position Type: Full-Time/Regular
Salary Grade:

To apply, visit https://jobs.silkroad.com/BU/Faculty/jobs/314681







Copyright ©2024 Jobelephant.com Inc. All rights reserved.

Posted by the FREE value-added recruitment advertising agency
jeid-c25177a96db3464f89da94a9e93f1be1

Organization

The Difference Is Our DNA

What compelled the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to award Boston University a grant to fight newborn mortality in Zambia? Why did Martin Luther King, Jr. adopt BU as a place where he could hone his message of justice and equality? And what is the catalyst that prompts 32,557 students from 135 countries to call BU their home every semester? It’s in our DNA: an inherent desire in each of our students, faculty, and staff to vigorously and dauntlessly pursue knowledge—and embrace the unlimited possibilities that come with it.

A Community Unlike Any Other

As you can see below, it takes people, ideas, and a little luck (Boston, you’re our town) to make BU what it is today: one of the most dynamic universities in the world.

Celebrated thinkers: On any given day, students will find themselves mesmerized by Nobel Prize winners, a poet laureate, and the first biomedical engineer ever to receive a MacArthur Foundation “Genius Award,” among others.

Extraordinary teaching: When a classroom starts to percolate with new ideas, it’s because our faculty of scholars and accomplished practitioners know how to ignite students’ imaginations. That’s why we reward our best teachers with BU’s most prestigious honor: The Metcalf Cup and Prize.

Groundbreaking research: With faculty dedicated to a creative, interdisciplinary approach to problem solving, BU has become a leading global research institution—propelled forward by over $350 million a year in sponsored program revenue.

World-class students: Elite students from all 50 states and 135 countries pursue higher education on BU campuses in Boston and at programs in L.A., D.C., and more than 30 other cities on six continents.

A city within a city: Today, 80% of our undergrads live on campus, which could explain the 525 student activity groups alone.

The greatest college town in the world: Boston. ’Nuff said.

Get job alerts

Create a job alert and receive personalized job recommendations straight to your inbox.

Create alert