February 26-28 2014
A 3-DAY CONFERENCE FEATURING UA SCHOLARS ACROSS MULTIPLE DISCIPLINES
FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
Humanities, Medicine & Wellness is a boundary-breaking conference featuring University of Arizona faculty working at the intersections of the humanities, health sciences, and wellness initiatives to address global challenges. The conference will be held February 26-28, 2014 on the campus of the University of Arizona and willintegrate research panels and papers from the Colleges of Humanities, Law, Medicine, Public Health, Science, Social and Behavioral Sciences, and others.
An initiative of the College of Humanities (COH), Humanities, Medicine & Wellness offers a unique opportunity for UA researchers from multiple disciplines to come together across campus, to foster new intellectual synergies, and to bring new insights and impetus for future project-based collaborations. COH has a strategic priority in bridging the work of health sciences and wellness initiatives with the interdisciplinary contributions of Applied and Public Humanities.
KEYNOTE ADDRESS
The keynote speaker on Thursday, February 27, 2014 at 6 pm (Student Union North Ballroom) is Dr. Esther Sternberg, Director of Research at the Arizona Center for Integrative Medicine (AzCIM), and Professor in the UA College of Medicine-Tucson and the UA College of Architecture, Planning and Landscape Architecture (CAPLA). She is also Director of the Institute on Place and Wellbeing. Internationally recognized for her discoveries of the science of the mind-body interaction in illness and healing, Dr. Sternberg is the author of the best-selling books Healing Spaces: The Science of Place and Well-Being andThe Balance Within: The Science Connecting Health and Emotions.
The organizers of the Humanities, Medicine, and Wellness Conference are:
- Dr. Hester Oberman, Medical Humanities Liaison for the College of Humanities
- Dr. Karen Seat, Director of the Religious Studies Program.
This conference is sponsored by:
The University of Arizona College of Humanities (COH), with support from the Confluence Center for Creative Inquiry, the Religious Studies Program, the Department of English Convergences Program, the Institute for the Study of Religion and Culture (ISRC) as well as the following COH units: School of International Languages, Literatures, and Cultures (SILLC); Poetry Center; Africana Studies Program; Department of Classics; Department of East Asian Studies; Department of English; Department of French and Italian; Department of German Studies; Department of Russian and Slavic Studies; Department of Spanish & Portuguese; Center for English as a Second Language (CESL); National Center for Interpretation (NCI); and the Graduate Interdisciplinary Program in Second Language Acquisition and Teaching (SLAT).
Copyright Board of Regents 2014
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