u/gladchadstone

Me as a European who has lived, studied, worked, and travelled in in the US trying to explain to other Europeans who only know the US through TikTok why their unfavourable perceptions are false
🔥 Hot ▲ 131 r/AmericaBad

Me as a European who has lived, studied, worked, and travelled in in the US trying to explain to other Europeans who only know the US through TikTok why their unfavourable perceptions are false

u/gladchadstone — 2 hours ago

Moving from the EU to the east coast as a philosophy grad advice

I am an Irish citizen (27) and have a masters in philosophy of science and technology. I have lived in Boston before as i did an exchange year at Boston College during my bachelors and worked legally at the university library while i was there. Boston is my ideal place to move to, but the east coast in general i am open to.

I am looking of the direction to my search, because I am feeling lost when i try right now and don´t know where to look or how to approach this task. career paths i may not have considered are also welcome.

Alongside my degree, I also have work experience, mainly in the form of internships at policy research and technology compliance companies as well as academic research and teaching positions.

I have tried applying directly to some university administrative/support roles and policy researcher roles in Boston and DC but often i don´t even get a rejection email.

I have also tried applying to a few fellowship such as IAPS and the Horizon institute to no avail.

I do not have a PhD, but I would be open to starting one to get to the US if it was adequately compensated.

reddit.com
u/gladchadstone — 5 days ago