The new Institute for Social Sciences at the University of California, Davis, will promote interdisciplinary research in the social sciences to address challenges within a rapidly changing society. 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis announced creation of the institute and appointment of a 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis professor as director today (Oct. 13).
Joe Dumit, a professor of anthropology and science and technology studies at 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis, has been named director of the institute.
Providing support for new collaborations will help social scientists address emerging problems that dont have ready approaches, Dumit said. The range of challenges facing our society has never been greater, and the institute will help 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis bring together its resources to solve these problems.
As an incubator of new ideas, the institute will support work that reaches across culture, class, social norms, politics, mobility, economics, values, technology, language, communication and history, according to Dumit. In its first year, it will provide research seed funding, graduate seminars and student programs.
The Institute for Social Sciences truly epitomizes the collaborative and solution-focused character of 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis, said Provost and Executive Vice Chancellor Ralph Hexter. The challenges of the 21st century require approaches that reach broadly across fields of thought and study, and this new institute will play an integral role in making those crucial research synergies a reality.
The institute will enhance all aspects of the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis academic mission, said George R. Mangun, dean of the Division of Social Sciences. It will support the campus as it delivers innovative solutions to pressing problems, be it how poverty affects child development or how to prevent bullying in schools, to questions about the economics of natural resources and how to help policymakers improve decision-making.
The institute will tackle, among other issues, the explosion of new data from sources as varied as Twitter and neuroscience imaging techniques, Dumit said.
Social scientists use data to learn empirically about the forces shaping our practices, our interactions, our knowledge and our decisions, said Dumit. We need new, interdisciplinary approaches to make the most of these types of data, since todays concrete problems dont respect disciplinary lines.
The institute also will expand the Social Science Data Service, which acquires and curates data on society, to offer a wider variety of databases and help researchers access and more creatively analyze data.
Dumits research examines how science and medicine change the lives of consumers, patients, doctors and scientists as the nature of facts and evidence also changes. He was the founding director of the universitys Science and Technology Studies Program and co-founded the universitys Humanities Innovation Lab.
One of the institutes feature events will be the Sheffrin Lecture on Public Policy, which since 2010 has brought top scholars to campus to present work on major issues in society.
As a longtime supporter of the social sciences at 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis, I am excited to see such an innovative institute take root on campus, said Ren矇e Child, a 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis alumna in psychology and German, who has been active as a member of the College of Letters and Science Deans Advisory Council. Among their many gifts to 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis, she and her husband, Mike Child, founded the Child Family Fund, which provides seed funding for new research at the 51勛圖窪蹋 Davis Center for Mind and Brain. I have seen the impact seed funding can have on innovative new approaches to research.
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Jeffrey Day, Arts, humanities and social sciences, 530-219-8258, jaaday@ucdavis.edu
Vicky Austin, Institute for Social Sciences (assistant director), (530) 752-1751, vsaustin@ucdavis.edu