Search Results - 182 results
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Senior Practitioner in Residence in Newark
Seton Hall University School of Law has an immediate opening for a full-time experienced immigration attorney to serve as Senior Practitioner-in-Residence in its Center for Social Justice, Immigrants’ Rights/International Human Rights Clinic. This is a year-round non-teaching position and is entirely grant-funded. The Center for Social Justice is home to the Law School’s vibrant clinical program including civil litigation; equal justice; family law; health justice; immigrants’ rights/international human rights; and impact litigation. Furthermore, the Immigrants’ Rights/International Human Rights Clinic is one of four partners in an exciting and innovative project, funded by the state of New Jersey, to provide legal representation to detained and non-detained immigrants in removal proceedings. Seton Hall Law’s Immigration Detention Project presently encompasses a Managing Attorney, one full-time Practitioner-in-Residence, two Immigration Detention Fellows, clinical and extern law students, and two full-time paralegals. The ultimate goal of the Project is to provide universal representation to immigrants detained in New Jersey.
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Lecturer in South Orange
The Department of Mathematics and Computer Science at Seton Hall University invites applications for a Full-Time Lecturer position in Mathematics to start in August 2025. Seton Hall University is an Equal Opportunity employer. It honors diversity and respects the religious commitments of all its employees. In turn, its employees respect Catholic beliefs and values, and they support its mission as a Catholic institution of higher education.
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Adjunct Instructor - Forensic Psychology in South Orange
The Psychology Department at Seton Hall University is seeking an adjunct instructor to teach an in-person course in Forensic Psychology starting January 2024. This 2000-level (i.e., lower division) course is taught for students who are majors or minors in Psychology. In the Psychology Department, all new adjunct faculty are paired with full-time faculty mentors to help the individual develop their teaching through conversation and course observation. Additionally, all adjunct faculty at Seton Hall enjoy free access to on-campus fitness facilities. Seton Hall University is located in South Orange, New Jersey, 14 miles from New York City. It is the oldest Catholic diocesan institution of higher education in the United States. It is home to approximately 6,300 undergraduate and 4,700 graduate students from all 50 states and more than 60 foreign countries. An exciting and culturally diverse community, Seton Hall pursues academic excellence and ethical development in a collaborative environment and prepares its students to be servant leaders in their professional and community lives.
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Adjunct Instructor - Professional Psychology & Family Therapy in South Orange
The Department of Professional Psychology and Family Therapy is dedicated to serving the needs of aspiring mental health professionals in counseling, school counseling, school psychology, and counseling psychology. Graduates go on for their licensure/certification and become practicing counselors psychologists and marriage and family therapists, as well as receiving certificates in Sports Psychology, Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation, and Applied Behavior Analysis. The Department offers a robust portfolio of certificate, master’s, educational specialists, and doctoral programs. Each program is individualized to meet the students’ strengths and professional goals. The doctoral program in Counseling Psychology is APA accredited and offers the student a 5-year program leading to the degree of Doctorate of Philosophy.
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Faculty, Adjunct in South Orange
The University CORE Curriculum at Seton Hall is seeking adjuncts (part time, nontenure-track) for the Academic Year of 2023-2024 to teach one or two sections of our Signature Core I and Core II courses. The courses are Journey of Transformation (Core I) and Christianity and Culture in Dialogue (Core II), and they are required for all Freshmen and Sophomores students. The courses consider the relationship between the Catholic intellectual tradition and other religions and cultures, particularly in terms of how they answer the big questions of life common to us all. Texts from the Christian tradition are studied along with texts from non-Christian traditions to demonstrate direct connections across other religions and cultures.
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