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DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260413T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260413T140000
DTSTAMP:20260428T152800
CREATED:20260113T170142Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260216T213136Z
UID:10002448-1776081600-1776088800@careerhub.unc.edu
SUMMARY:Ethical Life in Unethical Times: Moral Injury\, Complicity\, and Repair
DESCRIPTION:Description: \nMany individuals are navigating life within political\, institutional\, and environmental systems that conflict with their values. Moral pain can arise when people feel complicit in harm\, powerless to act\, or unable to prevent violations of what they believe is right. These experiences can manifest as guilt\, grief\, anger\, numbness\, or disconnection and are often pathologized or overlooked. First recognized in military settings\, the frameworks of moral injury and moral distress now hold broader relevance for anyone living or working within systems that harm others\, even when they have little control. \nDr. Warren Kinghorn will outline the historical and ethical foundations of moral injury\, highlighting how it names forms of suffering often mistaken for dysfunction. Dr. Jason Nieuwsma will discuss how Acceptance and Commitment Therapy offers a values-based\, non-pathologizing approach to healing. Participants will reflect on what it means to live—and help others live—with integrity in the face of systems we cannot fully control\, and how emotional responses may also point to sites of responsibility and action.\nTrainers:  \nJason Nieuwsma\, PhD is a clinical psychologist and Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He also serves as Associate Director for Integrative Mental Health in the Department of Veterans Affairs. His work focuses on integrating evidence-based psychotherapies into medical and spiritual care settings\, with a particular emphasis on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)\, moral injury\, and collaborative work with chaplains and clergy. Dr. Nieuwsma has led national initiatives within the Department of Veterans Affairs to address moral injury among veterans and healthcare providers. He has developed and evaluated ACT-based\, group interventions for moral injury and trained VA chaplains and clinicians in cross-disciplinary approaches that recognize both psychological and spiritual dimensions of moral distress.\nWarren Kinghorn\, ThD\, MD is a psychiatrist and theologian at Duke University\, where he serves as Associate Research Professor of Psychiatry and of Pastoral and Moral Theology. He co-directs the Theology\, Medicine\, and Culture Initiative at Duke Divinity School and is a staff psychiatrist at the Durham VA Medical Center. His work explores the intersections of mental health\, trauma\, spirituality\, and moral meaning. Dr. Kinghorn is a leading voice in reframing moral injury as an ethical and relational response to wrongdoing or betrayal\, rather than as a psychiatric disorder. Drawing from theology\, philosophy\, and clinical experience\, he teaches and writes about how spiritual and moral frameworks can support healing. His work often focuses on veterans and others in caregiving roles\, while emphasizing the institutional and social contexts that shape experiences of moral injury.\nLearning Objectives:\nAt the end of the training participants will be able to:\nDescribe the concepts of moral injury and moral distress and identify their relevance in both client and clinician experiences.\nRecognize emotional\, cognitive\, and behavioral indicators of moral conflict in clinical and broader societal contexts.\nApply ACT-based strategies to help individuals clarify values\, hold moral pain with psychological flexibility\, and move toward meaningful action.\nHosted by: School of Social Work\nOnline Location: https://sswevents.unc.edu/ethical-life-unethical-times-moral-injury-complicity-and-repair-w-jason-nieuwsma-phd-warren-kinghorn\nAdditional Information can be found at: https://heellife.unc.edu/event/11987802
URL:https://careerhub.unc.edu/event/ethical-life-in-unethical-times-moral-injury-complicity-and-repair/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Career Exploration & Development,ThoughtfulLearning
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260413T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260413T140000
DTSTAMP:20260428T152800
CREATED:20260113T170143Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260216T213136Z
UID:10002449-1776081600-1776088800@careerhub.unc.edu
SUMMARY:Ethical Life in Unethical Times: Moral Injury\, Complicity\, and Repair
DESCRIPTION:Description: \nMany individuals are navigating life within political\, institutional\, and environmental systems that conflict with their values. Moral pain can arise when people feel complicit in harm\, powerless to act\, or unable to prevent violations of what they believe is right. These experiences can manifest as guilt\, grief\, anger\, numbness\, or disconnection and are often pathologized or overlooked. First recognized in military settings\, the frameworks of moral injury and moral distress now hold broader relevance for anyone living or working within systems that harm others\, even when they have little control. \nDr. Warren Kinghorn will outline the historical and ethical foundations of moral injury\, highlighting how it names forms of suffering often mistaken for dysfunction. Dr. Jason Nieuwsma will discuss how Acceptance and Commitment Therapy offers a values-based\, non-pathologizing approach to healing. Participants will reflect on what it means to live—and help others live—with integrity in the face of systems we cannot fully control\, and how emotional responses may also point to sites of responsibility and action.\nTrainers:  \nJason Nieuwsma\, PhD is a clinical psychologist and Associate Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He also serves as Associate Director for Integrative Mental Health in the Department of Veterans Affairs. His work focuses on integrating evidence-based psychotherapies into medical and spiritual care settings\, with a particular emphasis on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT)\, moral injury\, and collaborative work with chaplains and clergy. Dr. Nieuwsma has led national initiatives within the Department of Veterans Affairs to address moral injury among veterans and healthcare providers. He has developed and evaluated ACT-based\, group interventions for moral injury and trained VA chaplains and clinicians in cross-disciplinary approaches that recognize both psychological and spiritual dimensions of moral distress.\nWarren Kinghorn\, ThD\, MD is a psychiatrist and theologian at Duke University\, where he serves as Associate Research Professor of Psychiatry and of Pastoral and Moral Theology. He co-directs the Theology\, Medicine\, and Culture Initiative at Duke Divinity School and is a staff psychiatrist at the Durham VA Medical Center. His work explores the intersections of mental health\, trauma\, spirituality\, and moral meaning. Dr. Kinghorn is a leading voice in reframing moral injury as an ethical and relational response to wrongdoing or betrayal\, rather than as a psychiatric disorder. Drawing from theology\, philosophy\, and clinical experience\, he teaches and writes about how spiritual and moral frameworks can support healing. His work often focuses on veterans and others in caregiving roles\, while emphasizing the institutional and social contexts that shape experiences of moral injury.\nLearning Objectives:\nAt the end of the training participants will be able to:\nDescribe the concepts of moral injury and moral distress and identify their relevance in both client and clinician experiences.\nRecognize emotional\, cognitive\, and behavioral indicators of moral conflict in clinical and broader societal contexts.\nApply ACT-based strategies to help individuals clarify values\, hold moral pain with psychological flexibility\, and move toward meaningful action.\nHosted by: School of Social Work\nOnline Location: https://sswevents.unc.edu/ethical-life-unethical-times-moral-injury-complicity-and-repair-w-jason-nieuwsma-phd-warren-kinghorn\nAdditional Information can be found at: https://heellife.unc.edu/event/11987803
URL:https://careerhub.unc.edu/event/ethical-life-in-unethical-times-moral-injury-complicity-and-repair-2/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Career Exploration & Development,ThoughtfulLearning
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20260414T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20260414T170000
DTSTAMP:20260428T152800
CREATED:20260202T192942Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260216T213137Z
UID:10002629-1776182400-1776186000@careerhub.unc.edu
SUMMARY:APS Colloquium Series - Dr. Oana Jurchescu\, Wake Forest University
DESCRIPTION:TITLE: Printed Electronics: Translating Fundamental Device Physics into Safer Radiotherapy\n Abstract:\nThe rapid expansion of the Internet of Things necessitates a paradigm shift toward ubiquitous\, adaptable\, and cost-effective computing. While printed organic electronics offer a promising pathway to this future\, their widespread adoption is currently hindered by instability and inefficient carrier dynamics. This presentation discusses the bottlenecks in charge injection and transport that limit the performance and lifespan of organic devices. I will show how resolving these fundamental stability and environmental challenges enables a new class of healthcare technology: flexible\, skin-conformal radiation dosimeters. These organic transistor-based sensors allow for real-time dose mapping\, offering a versatile tool for enhanced patient safety during cancer radiotherapy.\nBio:\nOana D. Jurchescu is a Baker Professor of Physics at Wake Forest University in Winston-Salem\, North Carolina\, USA and a fellow of the American Physical Society\, Materials Research Society and the Royal Society of Chemistry. She received her PhD in 2006 from University of Groningen\, the Netherlands\, and was a postdoctoral researcher at the National Institute of Standards and Technology\, USA. Her expertise is in charge transport in organic and organic/inorganic hybrid semiconductors\, device physics and semiconductor processing. She is the recipient of several awards\, including the CAREER award from the National Science Foundation\, NSF (2013)\, the NSF special creativity award (2022)\, and the Pegram Award from American Physical Society for excellence in teaching and mentoring (2022). She is an associate editor for Journal of Materials Chemistry C (RSC) and Science Advances (AAAS) and serves as a member of the Advisory Board of Chemical Physics Reviews\, Organic Electronics\, Newton and J. Phys Materials.\nWeb: https://jurchescu.physics.wfu.edu/\nHosted by: Applied Physical Sciences Department\nAdditional Information can be found at: https://heellife.unc.edu/event/12170241
URL:https://careerhub.unc.edu/event/aps-colloquium-series-dr-oana-jurchescu-wake-forest-university/
LOCATION:Chapman Hall
CATEGORIES:Career Exploration & Development,ThoughtfulLearning
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