Hello, dear reader! This email is not a full-fledged issue of AI, Law, and Otter Things. But, shortly after sending the previous newsletter, I realized I had skipped the usual section containing links to job opportunities, open calls for papers, and stuff. So, here it is. And, as usual, it is accompanied by a cute otter.
Please feel free to send me any job openings and call for papers that might be of interest to readers of this newsletter. (And even more free to tell me if you have an open position to which I might be a good fit!)
Job openings
The University of Bristol is looking for a Lecturer or Senior Lecturer in law. The job posting mentions they are keen on a few areas, namely Corporate Governance, Company Law, Commercial Law, Financial Services Law, Criminal Procedure and Evidence, Banking Law, Family Law, or Corporate Finance. Applications are accepted until 21 April 2024.
King’s College London is looking for a Lecturer in Law, whose primary contribution to teaching will be on Public or Criminal Law. They are also taking applications until 21 April 2024.
The National University of Singapore Faculty of Law is hiring law professors at the assistant, associate, and full professor levels, and law & tech is one of their priority areas. Applications are sought by 30 June 2024.
Professor Niovi Vavoula at the University of Luxembourg is hiring a PhD researcher, a research and development specialist, and a postdoctoral researcher for her chair in Cyber Policy.
Calls for papers
The first Warhammer Conference will take place on 27–28 September 2024 at Heidelberg University, Germany (in a hybrid format). Their call for papers is open until 31 July 2024, accepting 300-word abstracts that provide scholarly analyses of Warhammer 40k lore as well as papers focused on the hobby and the game.
The University of Amsterdam will host PLSC-Europe on 24–25 October 2024. It is an interesting opportunity to get feedback on works in progress within the privacy space (broadly construed, almost broad enough to tempt me to send something.). Abstracts of 400-700 words are due by 3 May 2024, and a finished draft of the accepted papers must be sent by 1 October 2024.
The conference “Rethinking the Inevitability of AI: The Environmental and Social Impacts of Computing in Historical Context”, hosted by the University of Virginia, is currently accepting submissions. Paper proposals of 300-500 words are due by 22 April 2024, with the event taking place online on 18 July 2024.
CPDP LatAm will take place on 17–18 July 2024 at FGV Direito Rio. This year’s call for papers has the theme “Data Governance: From Latin America to G20”, and it welcomes papers in English, Portuguese, and Spanish on a broad array of topics within that overarching theme. First drafts (5–7,000 words) are due by 25 May 2024.
That’s it for today, folks. Hope this is of some use to you, and please consider subscribing to the newsletter if you haven’t done so already:
Hope to see you for the next issue!