[ Informação FPCEUP ]
FPCEUP – Formação ao Longo da Vida | Curso “Primeiros Socorros Psicológicos em Crise e Catástrofe” | Programa Impulso Adultos PRR
Formação para saber atuar de forma precoce para a estabilização emocional em situações de crise ou catástrofe, por forma a reduzir impactos psicológicos com stress, burnout, stress pós-traumático, burnout e fadiga de compaixão.
Conheça os fatores de proteção como resiliência, coping e crescimento pós-traumático: cuidar de si para melhor cuidar dos outros!
De 27-02-2026 a 21-03-2026 | Candidaturas: até 20-02-2026
B-learning | 6 ECTS | Bolsas de Incentivo
+info: https://sigarra.up.pt/fpceup/pt/cur_geral.cur_view?pv_ano_lectivo=2024&pv_origem=CUR&pv_tipo_cur_sigla=UFC&pv_curso_id=30301
[ Informação ESA RN37 – Urban Sociology ]
1º PhD IS-UP Winter School with ESA RN37 (Porto, 4-6 February) – A brief report
Research Network 37 – Urban Sociology (ESA) collaborated with the 1st Winter School of the Institute of Sociology at the University of Porto (IS-UP) through dissemination and outreach efforts, as well as through the involvement of RN37’s PhD Representative, Beatriz Lacerda, who was part of the organizing committee – the IS-UP’s PhD Club.
– The 1st IS-UP Winter School took place on February 4–6 at Faculty of Arts and Humanities of the University of Porto (Porto, Portugal) and was organized by the PhD Club, thanks to the joint efforts of the PhD students Ana Maria Santos, Ana Cíntia, Beatriz Lacerda, Catarina Figueiredo, Francisca Teixeira, Rúben Elias and Tiago Pinto.
Under the theme “Imagined Territories: Visual Methods and Spatial Storytelling,” and in close collaboration with the Institute of Sociology of the University of Porto as well as with the support of ESA RN37 – Urban Sociology and the Department of Sociology of the University of Porto, and the generosity of Espiga-Bar and Cinema Batalha, the PhD Club put together a rich and inspiring program:
– 3 plenary sessions
– 3 hands-on workshops
– 2 film sessions
– a sociological tour
– and an informal sharing circle that strengthened connections and opened paths for future collaborations.
We welcomed 27 participants from 11 countries — Croatia, Estonia, Finland, Germany, Italy, Lithuania, Portugal, Spain, Turkey, the United Kingdom, and the United States.
Over these three days, we explored the relevance and diverse uses of visual approaches in social and sociological research, intervention, education, and artistic practice across contexts. Participants experimented with replicable “toolkit” techniques, reflected on the importance of ethnographic grounding and co-creation through visual methods, and openly discussed ethical challenges as well as the transformative potential of these approaches.
The school closed with a reflection on how visual methodologies can help maintain and co-construct collective heritage, especially in rural contexts and among traditionally invisible groups. Drawing on the vast experience of our invited contributors and the active engagement of participants, we tackled difficult questions, shared mistakes and frustrations, and exchanged good practices and techniques that can be replicated and adapted elsewhere.
Our heartfelt thanks to our invited contributors (in the order of the programme):
Joana Mesquita | Sociological Tour “Walking Through Arts-Based Performances: Questioning (In)equalities”
João Teixeira Lopes and Virgílio Borges Pereira | Welcoming Session
Lígia Ferro | Plenary Session “Visual Sociology of Place: Why Visual Methods and Urban Ethnography Matter for Research and Co-creation”
Inês Barbosa | Workshop “Emotional Cartography”
Kim Carlotta von Schönfeld | Workshop “Co-creative Imaginaries – Methods for Research, Teaching, and Public Participation”
Rodrigo Resende Coutinho | Movie Screening with Director “In my Land, Carnaval is Religion” (2025, Coutinho)
João Queirós, Ana Muska and Eduardo Silva | Round Table “Limits and Ethical Challenges Using Visual Methods”
Ana Garcia and Inês Santos Moura | Workshop “Voices through images: Participatory Visual Methodologies”
Diana Gomes and Leonor Medon | Closing Session “Making Memory Last: Social Images, Local Narratives and Collective Imagination”
RN37 is glad to support initiatives like this that foster international dialogue, methodological innovation, and collaboration among early-career researchers. Congratulations to the organizing team and all participants for a successful first edition — we look forward to future exchanges!