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Issue No. 2021-02

June, 2021

In this issue:

  • Welcome and Bienvenidos 
  • Editorial: Our Ronin Institute home at 10 years
  • Driven by Interest 
  • Get to know a Ronin Scholar 
  • Did you know?
  • The world is your oyster
Welcome
from the editor Emily Monosson

I write in this incredibly fraught time, as many in the world celebrate the coming of spring, rebirth, freedom and hope in one way or another. Hope is powerful. But we can't always rely on hope. Sometimes we need to take action. Big or small and incremental, action matters if we are to move forward.

Ten years ago Jon Wilkins had an idea, a home for scholars who wanted to live and work outside of academia. The home he co-founded became the Ronin Institute. What began with just five new members has grown in so many ways.

We wanted to showcase here what we've achieved as a community of Scholars over the past ten years. But it's really challenging to capture the work of Ronin Scholars without sliding into the typical academic bean counting: papers, funding, presentations. Because in addition to those conventional products, there are also: self-organizing working groups, members who volunteer to host and facilitate events ranging from workshops to lightning talks, global Slack discussions about weather, food, coding and sustainability, and there are blog posts written by our members about educating children about mental health, preserving cultural heritage particularly in the most difficult of times, and the value of multilingualism. There are members who among many other scholarly ventures create lush green gardens, play music and do improv and contribute to their local communities. This is hope in action. This is the Ronin Institute in action. Read on for more. 
***
Bienvenidos de nuevo
Spanish translation by Ainara Mancebo

Escribo durante estos actuales tensos tiempos, en los que muchos en el mundo celebran la llegada de la primavera, el renacimiento, la libertad y la esperanza de uno u otro modo. La esperanza es poderosa. Pero no siempre podemos agarrarnos sólo a ella. A veces debemos pasar a la acción. Poca o mucha pero incremental, pasar a la acción es importante si nos movemos hacia adelante.

Hace diez años, Jon Wilkins tuvo una idea, un hogar para investigadores que quisiesen vivir y trabajar fuera del mundo académico. La casa que co-fundó se convirtió en el Instituto Ronin. Empezó con sólo cinco miembros y hoy ha crecido en muy distintas formas.

Quisiéramos presentar aquí lo que hemos alcanzado como comunidad de investigadores independientes en estos diez años. Aunque es todo un desafío mostrar el trabajo de los investigadores Ronin, sin repasar las aportaciones académicas tradicionales: artículos, financiación, ponencias. Pero además de estos productos convencionales de nuestro sector académico, también existen: grupos de trabajo autónomos, miembros que se ofrecen voluntarios para presentar y facilitar eventos que van desde workshops a Lightning Talks, debates en Slack sobre el clima, comida, codificación, y sostenibilidad, así como las publicaciones en nuestro blog escritos por nuestros miembros sobre la educación infantil, sobre salud mental, sobre conservación del patrimonio cultural particularmente en estos tiempos difíciles, y el valor del multilingüismo. Hay miembros quienes, entre muchos otros proyectos académicos, crean suntuosos jardines ecológicos, tocan música, contribuyen y mejoran sus comunidades. Hay esperanza en pasar a la acción. Esto es el Instituto Ronin en acción. Sigue leyendo para descubrir más.”
 
Spring. Hope. Hepatica.

Photo credit: Emily Monosson
Editorial: Our Ronin Institute home at 10 years
by Emily Monosson

“Welcome! You’ve stumbled across the launch of the good ship Ronin Blog, the official blog of the Ronin Institute. Updates here will cover developments at the Ronin Institute, as well as topics of potential interest to independent scholars everywhere – or anyone who has ever thought/dreamed about pursuing research outside of the confines of the traditional academic system.” 
- Jon Wilkins, the Ronin Institute's first blog post

"When I first started thinking about forming the Ronin Institute," writes founder Jon F. Wilkins recently, "it was really motivated by the fact that I could not personally imagine pursuing a traditional academic career. I had become aware of the various pathologies that we now talk about within Ronin all the time—lack of control over where you live, distorted incentive systems that emphasize funding and flashy results over quality scholarship, and the toxic politics dominating many departments. I knew that was not the life I wanted."

Wilkins co-founded the Ronin Institute in 2012 with Richard Murray and Steven Orzack. Recalls Murray "I believe the first time Jon shared his vision was at a poker table in Santa Fe [New Mexico] while we (and about 5 others) were exploring the implication of complexity theory in the real world." At the time both were part of the Santa Fe Institute, a nonprofit devoted to complexity science. Pursuing Jon's vision, Murray writes, "would both be an opportunity to continue working with Jon beyond our time at Santa Fe and might enhance the possibility of freeing the creative talents of the many possible undiscovered Einsteins in the world that spend their days working in unrelated fields to put food on the table!"

Orzack had prior experience as a research scholar outside of the traditional academic setting having founded the Fresh Pond Research Institute in 1995. "Jon and I had a bunch of previous conversations about the downsides of being a scholar in academia, which ultimately led to the Ronin Institute idea. We both had positive expectations but I did not think Ronin would grow to what it is now in such a short period of time. Little did I know." Little did anyone know. 

That same year, Wilkins co-authored an article published in Wired magazine describing the enormous potential for “fractional scholarship," and the role the Ronin Institute might play in housing and supporting those scholars. 
 
“What do we do with everyone who has the skills and passion to make important contributions to scholarship, but for whom the standard model just doesn’t work?...[T]here is an opportunity for people to take up scholarly research in an independent, part-time capacity. We believe that the number of people who have ten, twenty, or thirty hours a week that they would like to devote to research is large. What is lacking at this point are the funding and organizational structures to support these would-be fractional scholars.” The Ronin Institute wrote Wilkins, “acts as an aggregator for the fractional scholars of the world, providing an institutional affiliation, connection with other fractional scholars, and support for conference travel and grant applications. The passion of these scholars would not be lost through attrition and the difficulties of working on one’s own; instead, it would be supported and encouraged."

The Institute launched and soon had its first five members: Kristina Killgrove, Ralph Haygood, John S. Wilkins, Steven Orzack, and Jon F. Wilkins.

About a year after the article was published, two dozen other scholars (including me) from various fields, seeking community, independence, and a way to carry out research in a way that best suited their lifestyle stumbled upon the good ship Ronin Institute. Now there are hundreds of us.

So what were those very first first members thinking when they joined this upstart Institute? And how do they feel now that ten years have passed and the Ronin Institute has grown? I recently reached out to these members to ask. Here are summaries and quotes from their email responses:

"I thought the Ronin Institute was an idea whose time had come," writes Ralph Haygood, "both for me personally and for the world." Ralph left academia in 2009, and knew others who had done likewise. "I suspected, many other ex-academics wanted to continue doing scholarly work, but our ability to do so was limited by a variety of factors. Some were easily articulated, such as the difficulty of accessing scholarly literature or even applying for, let alone securing, research grants without an academic affiliation. Others were less tangible, rooted in the challenge of imagining how to proceed, in the near absence of role models or close colleagues." 

Kristina Killgrove was two years post-PhD when she took the leap. "I liked Jon's vision for what independent scholarship could be--a collective of scholars all working in their own fields to push human knowledge forward. My favorite thing about academia has always been the research." After sending out nearly one hundred applications for various types of positions, Kristina wondered if the Ronin Institute might provide a path forward. 

John S. Wilkins too joined the Ronin Institute in search of a home-base, "as a new member of the precariat in academe, with no fixed access to scholarly resources and collegiality. The 'gig economy' should not be the dominant model in the academy, but if it is, then the Ronin Institute is essential."

For these early members and many others since, the Institute is truly like a home. Sometimes we stay put for years and sometimes we travel--whether towards the rocky shores of life in academia or elsewhere--secure in the knowledge that we can always come home. Over the years, our distributed community has grown, from a handful of members to over four hundred members. We have built an institution that is both stable and flexible, blossoming into a virtual space to fit our needs at any given time. The Institute flexes to accommodate the collaboration needs of say, math and physics scholars, or those who wish to explore how to provide educational opportunities, and just as easily--when those needs have been met--reabsorbing these structures again to make space for new ones.

But, just like a home, there are the unavoidable chores. Dog hair doesn't vacuum itself up nor do the dishes wash themselves, so we work together at the Ronin Institute to keep the things running: we welcome new members; keep our infrastructure updated; share and learn through organized seminars and workshops; provide necessary structure for researchers; and communicate. Just like any home is ours to run, the Ronin Institute works similarly under a "do-ocracy" approach: Do what you think needs to be done in the best way you can do it! 

We are still growing. And there are always challenges and opportunities to explore: Is it possible to provide educational opportunities, and what would that look like? What about providing access to literature and other material that remain locked beyond paywalls? How far can we decentralize the Institute? Can we strengthen our collective ability to support scholars seeking funding? What else might we dream up? If we can dream it, can we build it? 

Over the years we have grown, well beyond anything Jon F. Wilkins could have imagined. He writes recently, "It has become clear that there is an enormous pool of people in the world—numbering in the tens of thousands—who have the expertise and passion to contribute to our collective understanding of the world, but who simply don’t fit into one of the boxes defined by traditional career paths. The Institute has brought together a wonderful collection of people, and I never spend more than ten minutes interacting with them without learning something new. One thing that I hope we will see is a continued diversification of our population of Research Scholars."

As we celebrate the years, members, and our accomplishments, there are challenges ahead. One big challenge, observes Wilkins, "will be navigating the creation of necessary formal structures while trying to avoid some of the bureaucratic traps that plague traditional academia." That is one of the more daunting challenges for the home we call Ronin. But then what scholar doesn't love a good challenge? 

Scientiam consecemus!
 

 North Kinsman Mountain, part of the Appalachian Trail (Photo credit: Leigh Rae)

Driven by Interest: Our IG+ number has grown

Self-organized groups that are like "departments of choice" have emerged at the Ronin Institute over the past few years. These so-called Interest Groups or IGs are created by members based on current interests--and when those interests wane, the group can be set aside or archived, and revived again if needed. They can merge and divide, and when members feel a more formalized or regular gathering around the IG is warranted to develop specific projects, write papers, or simply explore some ideas more deeply, an IG can grow into an IG+ (Interest Group Plus). Since last year, the Center for Advancing Math and Physics (CAMP) IG+ has been going strong. Now it will be joined by two new IG+ which emerged in early 2022: Ronin College (tentatively named) and Ronin Women.

Members of our oldest and newest IG+ offered these descriptions of their work below. 

CAMP IG+
CAMP (the Center for Advancing Mathematics and Physics) started in February 2021. We have met regularly weekly–early Tuesday afternoons (New York time)–and occasionally later the same days. We have helped each other regarding the following: individual’s research (in general and with respect to details) in some areas of mathematics and physics, how to achieve publication of research, aspects of people’s careers and businesses, pluses and minuses of trying to disseminate research via conferences, specific conferences at which we might want to speak, and so forth. Some challenges have included interesting new or occasional participants, diversifying topics of interest, meeting-time conflicts associated with people’s other work, and pre-advertising informal talks during which the presenter wants detailed feedback. We would be happy to discuss (with other research scholars) our experiences and insight.

Ronin Women IG+
The Ronin Women's group emerged in 2022 and examines professional development and work/life balance through a feminist lens. Our goal is to create a virtual space for discussion and support of women scholars while collaborating on initiatives that develop from our meetings. We are a women focused group but are not exclusive to women, and welcome any Ronin scholars who share our mission. Meetings are once a month, usually the third Wednesday of every month at 10AM PT/1PM ET. For more information, contact co-leads Amy Collins and Ponn Mahayosnand.

 

Get to know a Ronin Scholar

By Varsha Dani

Let's get to know each other! Every issue of the newsletter will feature randomly chosen Ronin Research Scholar!s In this issue: Ruth Duerr tell us about herself as as Scholar, and Alex Lancaster represents for our Get to Know our Governance. 

Ruth Duerr

What do you do as a Ronin scholar?

I'm a generalist - so a little bit of lots of things; also does learning about things count?  If so, I am learning about sustainable agriculture and permaculture.

What do you do as a non-scholar Ronin?

Play the violin, cloisonné, jewelry making, gardening, reading (mostly science fiction) not in a priority order, writing letters to my representatives at all levels, signing way too many petitions to even count

What is the last thing you’ve done that you are most happy about?

Called a good friend on her birthday

What are you looking forward to right now?

The weekend!

Favorite comfort food?

Fruit soup

What do you listen to these days?

Classical music

What is the last book that you’ve read or listened to? Or what was the last thing you watched on TV?

Judgment at Proteus by Timothy Zahn

What’s the best thing you did last weekend?

You expect me to remember that far back?

Where do you currently live or spend most of your time? - can you share a photo?
 

My hubby behind one of our keyhole gardens
Westminster, Colorado 


Photo credit: Ruth Duerr



What is the world / political issue that worries you most these days?

Climate Change

In an alternative life, what different career / path would you have liked to explore?

Life on Mars or the Moon

When is your favorite time for writing?

Never

What is your morning ritual like?

Don't have one

Dogs or cats?

Both

Are you a coffee person?

No

Are you writing a paper at the moment? What is it? If not, what have you written last?

Uh... several actually.  Working on 1) a paper on best practices for harmonizing semantic resources, and 2) recommendations for repositories that wish to be CARE compliant, and 3) just finished something on resilience of communities with Research Scholar Arika Virapongse and folks from ESIP's community resilience cluster.

If the genie in the lamp gave you one wish, what would that be?

That the average human being would start thinking about and making choices about the future of humanity

Alex Lancaster 
 

What do you do as a Ronin scholar?

My background is in modeling in evolutionary biology, but more recently getting more interested in social and economic modeling, especially around basic income and knowledge production.

How do you contribute to the governance of Ronin?

Together with Rami Saydjari, I help co-lead the Infrastructure Working Group. Basically just helping keeping the lights on our website and other infrastructure. I also help a lot with keeping the blog running smoothly.

What are your thoughts about the future of the Institute, and what can you (or other scholars) do towards making it happen?

As the Institute grows, so do our needs. We're a peer-to-peer organization, where we all help "drive the truck", but we need to make it easier for people to contribute in small ways, as well as big ways (somewhat analogous to how contributions to Wikipedia happen at different scales, from fixing typos to guiding policy). Also, I believe we also need to do that whilst retaining the generous, humane, playful, and informal spirit that has been present since the beginning.

What do you do as a non-scholar Ronin?

I am a partner with Amber Biology, a computational biology research firm. Outside science, I spend a lot of time with my family, raising our tween. Also when I can, I like playing music with friends (mostly drums), and performing in the occasional improv show (at least before the pandemic).

What are you looking forward to right now?

Seeing more live music

Favorite comfort food?

Toast.

What is the last book that you’ve read or listened to? Podcast or show?

Recently finished "The End of Burnout: Why Work Drains Us and How to Build Better Lives" by Jonathan Malesic. Also watched "The Dropout" about the Theranos saga (which also happened to be a podcast).

What’s the best thing you did last weekend?

Got our new outdoor stove working.

Where do you currently live or spend most of your time? - can you share a photo?

My occasional "home office" at Spy Pond


Photo credit: Alex Lancaster


What is the world / political issue that worries you most these days?

Our civilization's apparent inability to recognize that we are part of nature, not separate from it.

Are you a coffee person?

Most definitely.

If the genie in the lamp gave you one wish, what would that be?

This is a trick question, isn't it?

Blogs!

Here are a few excerpts posted on the Ronin Blog by our scholars: 

Jose Luis Perez Velazquez asks:
If physical education is taught to children, why not mental education? 

...Today we are witnessing a realization of the importance of mental health. The COVID-19 pandemic has made even more evident the great problem of mental health —neuropsychiatric disorders are the number one health problem in the world—and it is of interest, perhaps even somewhat sad, that a pandemic was needed for many to realize the importance of mental health.

One fundamental solution to these phenomena, and many other troubles that affect our societies such as wars, racism, violence and so on, is education. It always struck me that children have a class of physical education even since primary school, but I have never heard of a class on mental education. If teaching what we can do with our muscles is good for children, why not teach them what they can do with their minds. Are we forgetting that minds move the muscles?
 


Kristin Parker exploresPreserving cultural heritage in times of crisis: the role of social media. 

...I’ve observed the impact of disaster, conflict and war on people from Afghanistan, India, Haiti, Iraq, Syria and the United States, and I understand the value of incorporating heritage protection alongside humanitarian aid. I’m often asked, “How is it possible to think of artifacts, monuments, or works of art when human lives are at stake?” Of course human lives come first. We also have to give people something to live for. Heritage plays a critical role during disaster; a family recipe written on a slip of paper recovered from a home destroyed by flood waters can act like a life raft or a person who has lost everything...  


Kathleen Stein-Smith writes about: Multilingualism, global competency and language learning for a better world: The role of independent scholars

....An especially interesting example of the significance of multilingualism in global citizenship has been the Many Languages One World Global Youth Forum (MLOW), which has brought college and university students together with all expenses paid to discuss and to present on the SDGs and on their implementation plans for specific goals in their communities in the UN General Assembly Hall — in a learned second language that was also one of the official languages of the UN... 

 

Did you know?

Since we are visiting the wayback machine, here is a bit about the Ronin Logo, from an early Kitsune:

The Ronin Institute Logo

In the upper right-hand corner of the newsletter, you can see the official Ronin Institute logo. Like the logos of many universities, our logo is designed to capture the core values that the Institute represents. But unlike logos featuring simple slogans like “Veritas” or “Let There Be Light”, our logo may not be entirely self explanatory. So here is a full-on exigesis of the logo’s various elements.


The Motto

The Ronin Institute for Independent Scholarship

In feudal Japan, if a Samurai lost their master, tradition required that they commit suicide. Those who chose not to kill themselves became masterless Samurai, or Ronin. These Ronin would wander the countryside, working as mercenaries or bodyguards, or, in the best incarnations, meting out justice. The paired swords were emblematic of the rank and rights of the Samurai. Ronin were those who said, “I have earned my swords, and I have a right to wear and use them, with or without a master”.

Read on for more. 

 

The world is your oyster
by Ainara Mancebo

Meetings, Seminars, and Calls For Participation


Summer School “Energy as a commons” will take place in Greece! The school will combine theoretical and hands-on exploration of alternative socio-technological futures. It is open to PhD students and master students who have finished first year of studies from all disciplines with an interest in energy transition, technology and societal issues. This summer school is organised jointly by COSMOLOCALISM research team and the P2P Lab collective.

Registration is possible until 15th June! 


Biannual Webinar Series on Research Data Management (RDM) and Open Science registration still open! The webinars are aimed at researchers and students but are open to anyone. Participation is free and no prior knowledge is needed. An initiative of Aalto University Research Data Management Network.

Registration for spring webinars is now open! 


Open Call announcement for Proposals on Consequences of the Scientific Reform Movement is open! This call aims to inspire scholars to take heed and critically reflect on the direction in which the scientific reform movement is heading. The Journal of Trial & Error has launched this call to encourage discussions on a second-generation challenge for the scientific-reform movement.

Call for proposal submission is possible until 18th May!


Have you seen some of our most recent videos from the Lightning Talks Tag series? Here some samples:
We'd love to hear from you! 

We appreciate all of you for following and reading the Ronin Institute's Kitsune newsletter. If you'd like to provide some input about how we can improve our communication with you, as well as suggested benefits that the Ronin Institute might provide, please consider filling out this quick 5-min survey
 
Fill out our 5-min survey!

Useful links

Calendar is where Ronin Research Scholars can find times and dates of meetings and seminars
Slack is where Ronin Research Scholars can interact with other Scholars, and join any number of Slack channels from Governance, to Membership to ig-covid19-biology. For those of you who are new to Slack or have any questions about on-boarding, contact @vesselin 


You can also reach out to us editors on Slack too: @emilyM and @Yasmina Jraissati

About the Ronin Institute

The Ronin Institute is dedicated to building an alternative model of academic scholarship outside of the traditional university system. To learn more, visit our website or send us an email.

We depend on public support. If you are in a position to do so, please consider making a donation. The Ronin Institute is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization, so your donation will be tax deductible to the full extent permitted by applicable tax law.

If you know someone who might be interested in the Ronin Institute, please feel free to forward this newsletter on to them. Questions? Comments? Suggestions? Contact Kitsune and let us know!


 

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