We are pleased to announce we are now accepting applications through March 1. Intern responsibilities include creative intellectual teamwork at annual conferences, on social media such as Facebook and Twitter, as well as generating new content for the AE/AES website. Our goal is to expand conversations about anthropology in general, and also to share and supplement the rich body of scholarship produced in the pages of American Ethnologist. Current projects include AE author interviews, curating collections of AE articles, writing and editing online essays, contributing to AE/AES social media accounts, and creative participation in and reporting from the annual AAA and AES meetings. Begun in 2016, the AES Editorial Intern program is a small group composed of graduate students from universities around the world.Prospective interns must be enrolled in a PhD program in socio-cultural anthropology. Participation in the intern program is a two-year commitment, with the possibility of extending one’s participation longer if desired.
Application Process:
To apply to the AES Editorial Intern program, please send the following materials to program directors, AES Digital Content Editors Carole McGranahan and Katie Kilroy-Marac by Monday, March 1:
• a current CV
• a 300-500 word statement introducing yourself, your research interests, stage in your graduate studies, and why you would like to be an AES Editorial Intern. For example, what sort of initiatives would you like to work on or create?
Applicants will be notified of their status by late March. Each year, the Editorial Intern team meets in person at the AES spring meeting and the AAA annual meeting, or meets virtually in pandemic times. AES provides travel funds to editorial team members for these meetings. Currently, the AAA annual meeting is still a possibility for November 17-21 in Baltimore, international health and travel conditions pending.
We welcome your applications!