Just accepted a job offer as a Research Associate at the Institute for Risk & Disaster Reduction at University College London. Also regret that I had to turn down a few good job offers considering what is best for my family and myself. Most of all, this is life and you will never know what is waiting ahead until you reach there and make a decision to move on with it. Hopefully, now I will get motivated to complete my the website and share with you many exciting, new research that I plan to do in the coming days.
7 Comments
23/8/2012 12:17:22 am
Excellent! I admire all the helpful data you've shared in your articles. I'm looking forward for more helpful articles from you. :)
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Shams
19/2/2013 04:26:33 am
Thanks, Joseph for your appreciation and encouragements. I will spend more time soon on this website in order to make it more useful for public. Please share if you have any particular suggestion.
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Shams
19/2/2013 04:36:14 am
Thanks a lot.
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Shams
19/2/2013 04:35:37 am
Well, working in the Disaster Risk Reduction sector is a good opportunity to work more closely with people who have gone through some kind of disaster in their lives. It gives a good reason to formulate effective plans and policy based on scientific research so that we can save more lives and reduce damage to properties and infrastructures when a disaster hits. I work on water-related risks and disasters, particularly water pollution (e.g. groundwater arsenic contamination) and its threat to public health and food production. I think you need to have a good background (MSc or a PhD degree) in physical or social science and knowledge in disaster risk reduction to get a career in this field. We offer a few courses (MRes in Risk & Disaster Reduction) at our institute (UCL IRDR).
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1/10/2013 10:58:26 pm
Hopefully, now I will get motivated to complete my the website and share with you many exciting, new research that I plan to do in the coming days.
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Dr. M. ShamsudduhaI am a geoscientist with special interests in water, climate and environmental issues in the Asian Mega-deltas including the largest of all, the Ganges-Brahmaputra-Megha Delta, and water and sustainable development issues in Sub-Saharan Africa. Archives
February 2013
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