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The Chair in Urban Resilience and Global Development will be expected to spearhead research, teaching and social valorization activities at ISS, primarily on the link between urbanisation, local and global development.
The position forms part of the ISS-wide research programme, Global Development and Social Justice. The Chair will contribute to the ISS research program and collaborate closely with the ISS-based Centre for Frugal Innovation in Africa, part of the strategic alliance between Leiden University, Delft University of Technology and Erasmus University Rotterdam (LDE). The Chair is expected to play a major role on behalf of ISS in the Erasmus Initiative Vital Cities and Citizens (VCC), a collaboration with the faculties of social sciences (ESSB) and the humanities (ESHCC). In addition, the chair will also link to the LDE Center for Migration and Diversity and the LDE Centre for BOLD cities.
The post will suit an academic with a strong track record in research and teaching in the broad field of development studies with a particular focus on the role and potential of urban resilience as a discourse and set of practices in tackling development challenges brought forth by global urbanization. Potential applicants should be able to address both the worldwide implications of urbanization and have in-depth knowledge of urban resilience, especially in relation to the cross-cutting research themes adopted by the ISS.
Description of the academic area
Cities in both the so-called Global South and North face multiple and ever-growing crises and stresses such as poverty, inequality, competition over living space and services, exclusion, violence, environmental degradation and disasters. An examination of local responses to urban precarity and marginality reveals diverse ways of people making-do in terms of financial resources, security, health and/or climate change. This makes visible dynamic urban practices of individuals, groups and institutions with particular orientations to labour and livelihood, security, and/or disaster management that do not offer a mere alternative to top-down approaches, but instead become part of a wider commitment to exploring diverse urban responses ‘in their own right’. This becomes especially important when seeking to rethink the urban worldwide from a Southern vantage point and explore:
a) existing and unfolding urban practices to ‘make-do’ in uncertain terrains from the perspectives of people who live through marginality, risk and violence; and
b) whether and how such strategies ‘from below’ interact with top-down arrangements geared towards coping with, adapting to and/or transforming urban crises.
Urban governance is thus perceived as a process which emerges through - and is constituted by –interactions between ideas, actors and practices at different scales and sites.
To elaborate, urban governance constitutes multiple actors (groups) at various administrative levels – not only the government with its politicians and bureaucrats, but also civil society and the private market – that interact and act to solve societal problems. Governance implies the sharing and interdependence of resources which make coordination and collaboration between actors with different organizational backgrounds and variety in perceptions and interests necessary - but also exceedingly complex. One risk is the depoliticization of the governance discourse where it may refer more to technical fixes or (formal) administrative dynamics, whereas the notion of power is - or should be - central in theories on urban resilience and development and ultimately addresses issues of exclusion, urban livelihoods and urban land grabbing.
Building on these ideas and without being prescriptive, the ISS expects the successful applicant to develop and generate research projects, including attention to knowledge uptake and policy recommendations, around thematic areas such as:
More details can be found in the Structure Report that is available as attachment 1.
Required Skills and Expertise
We are looking for candidates who meet the following requirements:
Required competences
(see overview vsnu competences, https://www.vsnu.nl/en_GB/job_classification_ufo.html)
Special procedures apply to the appointment of professors. The selected candidate will be proposed to the Rector/Dean ISS, who in turn will propose the candidate to the College of Promoties consisting of all deans of Erasmus University Rotterdam plus the Rector Magnificus. After approval, the Executive Board of Erasmus University appoints the candidate.
The selected candidate will be offered an initial 5-year contract at the level of Professor, with the possibility of extension and a permanent contract, conditional on performance. The candidate will be expected to take up the position as soon as possible.
In accordance with the conditions applied at Erasmus University Rotterdam as indicated in the Collective Labour Agreement (CAO NU) of the Dutch universities, the salary is dependent on the candidate’s experience corresponds to scale H2, which is between € 5.843 and € 8.508 gross per month, on a fulltime basis. In addition, EUR pays an 8% holiday allowance and an end-of-year payment of 8.3% and offers excellent secondary benefits including 41 annual leave days, on a fulltime basis. Furthermore, EUR is affiliated with ABP for the pension provision and we offer partially paid parental leave, fully paid extended birth leave for partners, a personal education budget, work-life balance coaches and more. Employees can also use EUR facilities, such as the Erasmus sports center and the University library.
Diversity
The International Institute of Social Studies is committed to building and sustaining a community based on inclusiveness, equity and diversity and the ISS community believes this will contribute to the ISS mission and vision of being the best institute in its field. ISS is an equal opportunities employer and we encourage applications from candidates of all genders, ethnicities and nationalities. Given the current composition of the ISS and priorities relating to staff diversity, the Institute has a preference for applicants originating from the Global South.
Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR) is an internationally oriented university with a strong social orientation in its education and research. Our scientists and students work in close collaboration with internal and external parties to solve global, social challenges, inspired by the always dynamic and cosmopolitan Rotterdam. Our mission is therefore "Creating positive societal impact". Our academic education is intensive, active and application oriented. Our research increasingly takes place in multidisciplinary teams, which are strongly intertwined with international networks. With our research impact and thanks to the high quality of education, EUR can compete with the top European universities. The Erasmian values function as our internal compass and make Erasmus University recognizable to the outside world: engaged with society, world citizen, connecting, entrepreneurial and open-minded.
The International Institute of Social Studies (ISS)
The International Institute of Social Studies (ISS) is a leading academic centre for international development studies. While based in The Hague, the ISS is part of Erasmus University Rotterdam. ISS was established in 1952 as a post-graduate institute of policy-oriented critical social science and development-oriented research. ISS offers a PhD in Development Studies, a 15,5 month MA in Development Studies, a joint MA in Public Policy (Mundus MAPP), a MPA in Governance delivered in Suriname, and post-graduate Diploma courses. While currently most of our courses are taught predominantly in person again (after a period of fully online and hybrid teaching due to COVID-19), ISS has embarked on a process of exploring the further potential of developing online courses.
ISS brings together a highly diverse international community of scholars and students from both the global South and the global North, on average originating from over 50 different countries. The Institute brings together people, ideas and insights in a multi-disciplinary setting which nurtures, fosters and promotes critical thinking and innovative research on fundamental social problems. Our strong partnerships with organizations and individuals in developing countries make up a vibrant network where we co-create knowledge so that teaching and research remain societally relevant. Key to the ISS philosophy and practices is the wish to contribute to achieving social justice and equity on a global level.
The ISS Strategic Plan aims to further develop ISS further into a research-intensive university institute in The Hague, focussing on academic excellence and high societal relevance of its research and teaching. ISS considers engagement that links research and teaching to society and societal challenges, to be an important task of the university.
All ISS staff members participate in the Institute’s research programme ‘Global Development and Social Justice’. As part of its Research Strategy, the Institute currently pursues four multidisciplinary, cross-cutting research themes: environment and climate change; conflict and peace; social protection and inequality; and migration and diversity.
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