Assistant Professor of Biomedical Semantics - Birmingham, United Kingdom - University of Birmingham

Tom O´Connor

Posted by:

Tom O´Connor

beBee Recruiter


Description

Position Details
Institute of Cancer and Genomic Sciences, College of Medical and Dental Sciences

Location:
University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham UK

Full time starting salary is normally in the range £44,414 to £52,841 with potential progression once in post to £59,450

Grade 8

Full Time, Permanent

Closing date: 17th July 2023


Academic Development Programme:

- new Assistant Professors will undertake a 5-year development programme, at the end of which they are expected to be promoted to Associate Professor. The programme consists of a variety of development opportunities and the time to reflect and develop.


Background

Recruiting talented faculty members affiliated with the Centre for Environmental Research and Justice (CERJ) at the University of Birmingham


We are recruiting an Assistant Professor, who will join our existing diverse team of twelve investigators plus seven additional new recruits from across the Colleges of Life and Environmental Sciences (LES), Arts and Law (CAL), and Medical and Dental Sciences (MDS).

Each post-holder will grow their independent research programmes while directly contributing to the seven-year, €400 million project
:European Partnership for the Assessment of Risks from Chemicals (PARC) .

The University of Birmingham is an equal opportunity employer wishing to recruit the rising stars in academia for transformative scientific research, guided by legal studies, that improves environmental health protection.

As a new hire among the seven other new appointees, you will be part of a team of supportive individuals and be well-positioned to develop your research networks further.

We also expect that you will contribute to academic citizenship, through generous, mutually respectful, and supportive working relationships with staff and students.


CERJ Post:

Assistant Professor of Biomedical Semantics**The post-holder joins CERJ and the Institute of Cancer and Genomics Sciences by providing expertise and leadership in the research area of
semantic technologies applied to toxicology and human health .

The University of Birmingham has made significant investments in data science - and specifically health data science - on campus, currently exceeding £25 million in new purpose-designed life sciences computing infrastructure, ambitious recruitment and funding commitments to our national role in Health Data Research UK and the Alan Turing Institute.

Moreover, Birmingham Health Partners - the strategic alliance between the University, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust and Birmingham Women & Children's NHS Foundation Trust - already underpins our role within health data science as well as several programmes, including the West Midlands Genomic Medicine Centre, the NIHR Biomedical Research Centre, and our Wessex & West Midlands Genomics Laboratory Hub.


About the Centre for Environmental Research and Justice (CERJ)


The University of Birmingham (UoB) is creating a new Centre that combines 21st century life science and law to make the environment safe from toxic chemicals and to defend people's rights to a healthful environment.

Its mission is to help remedy harm to human health and to the environment caused by pollution. Since 2012, UoB has championed a solution called
_Precision Toxicology _.

_It is an emerging scientific approach to environmental health protection by establishing causation between chemicals and their adverse health effects.

_Environmental justice is achieved by improving evidence-based governance interventions.

Unlike traditional academic pursuits which oftentimes divide global problems into research silos, this transdisciplinary research centre will proactively uncover - and ultimately break - the chains of cause and effect that link chemicals to human suffering and environmental depredations.

CERJ offers a different approach to environmental research and health protection, by combining the natural sciences, law, and education.


SCIENCE comprises systems biology, environmental chemistry, ecology, quantitative genetics, genomics, metabolomics, evolutionary theory, high-performance computing, artificial & human intelligence, clinical science, and toxicology to make fundamental discoveries that also help in the shift to a new approach to regulatory science.


LAW captures our society's values and is used as a mediating institution capable of engaging people competing in the private sector with the significant institutions of public life.

Law can operationalize the Centre's scientific knowledge in decision-making.

It can also explore the ethical and societal implications and considerations of how precision toxicology and associated scientific domains will evolve and be applied in risk management.


EDUCATION is necessary for lasting solutions based on a common understanding among our future leaders, in all sectors, who make strategic decisions based on scientific facts and a shared co

More jobs from University of Birmingham