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“At Zero Hunger Lab I found the combination I love so much: on one hand discovering new, interesting optimization techniques, and at the same time getting a step closer to reaching the goal of zero hunger in the world.”
Meike Reusken, PhD candidate Zero Hunger Lab,
graduated August 2024
Your position
This PhD project focuses on addressing the growing challenge of food insecurity, which has escalated due to climate extremes such as floods, droughts, and storms, disproportionately impacting low-income countries. The global population facing acute food insecurity has increased from 108 million in 2016 to 250 million in 2022, with climate-related disasters exacerbating the problem. A critical challenge in humanitarian aid lies in achieving a balance between reacting to crises, adaptation strategies, and the need for proactive risk management strategies to prevent climate shocks from evolving into full-scale emergencies. This research seeks to develop innovative models that integrate both immediate crisis responses and forward-looking investments in sustainable agricultural practices and climate-resilient systems, contributing to long-term food security and reducing reliance on humanitarian aid.
The project will first identify and analyze key drivers of food insecurity during climate driven crises. By employing data from satellite images, drones, socio-economic indicators, and local market dynamics, you will develop several scenarios for the occurrence and impact of various crises using advanced data analytics and machine learning models.
Secondly, you will use machine learning, and optimization techniques to build resilient, adaptive food aid systems and interventions that can better anticipate and respond to climate-induced crises. By collaborating with humanitarian organization ZOA (zoa-international.com) and others, this research aims to generate scalable, data-driven solutions for improving food security in vulnerable regions. Key components can include enhancing early warning systems, promoting the use of climate-resilient agricultural production methods, improving supply chain or storage logistics, and restoring ecosystems as natural buffers against environmental hazards. Ultimately, this project seeks to balance reactive crisis management with proactive measures that build long-term resilience in food-insecure regions.
A PhD dissertation at CentER requires the design and execution of 3 studies. The execution of the research work itself typically involves the conceptualization of the research questions and ideas, data collection, qualitative and/or quantitative analysis of the data, and writing and presenting of academic papers. The aim is to publish about those projects in high-quality academic journals. Two advisors will be assigned for supervising your PhD research. Upon successful completion of your courses and your research work, as demonstrated by a submitted and approved PhD dissertation and the subsequent defense, you will be awarded a doctoral degree by Tilburg University.
You will be enrolled as a PhD candidate in the world-class PhD program of CentER Graduate School of Business, where you will receive extensive training in theory and methods by taking several PhD-level courses. The courseload amounts to 36 ECTS, which is the equivalent for 6 full courses. The course program is composed by your supervisor and PhD program coordinator, in consultation with you.
There is also a travel budget for attending PhD level courses outside of CentER, work visits and conferences. The training can be adapted to the previous educational achievements of the PhD candidate by mutual agreement with the supervisors
80% of the position’s time will be dedicated to the completion of your PhD research, and 20% to the acquisition of academic skills through teaching courses and supervising master/bachelor theses within the department.
As PhD researcher you contribute to our mission
The Zero Hunger Lab helps to achieve global food security using mathematics and data science. We call it ‘bytes for bites’. Our mission is to make people independent of food aid so that they themselves can ensure sustainable food security. We do this not only in Africa, Asia and South America, but also in the Netherlands where more than 190.000 people (VBN, 2022) depend on food banks for their “daily bread”. Watch the videos from our recently promoted colleagues Meike, Melissa, Koen and Valentijn: Researchers Zero Hunger Lab | Tilburg University.
More information on our projects: Zero Hunger Lab.
What do we offer?
Tilburg University offers excellent benefits in a pleasant working environment. Our offer includes:
For more information, see our website and the Collective Labour Agreement of Dutch Universities.
Tilburg University is an academic, inclusive, and engaged community. Together with nearly 3,000 employees, we are committed to broad prosperity, sustainably, and inclusion. For current and future generations. We develop and share knowledge for the requirements of people and our society. This is how we contribute to solving complex social issues and help society move forward.
We educate our 19,500 students of 110 nationalities to become responsible leaders with knowledge, skills, and character. With our education and research for broad prosperity, we exceedingly focus on themes such as mental and preventive care, an inclusive labor market, the energy transition, and digitalization.
About TiSEM
Tilburg School of Economics and Management (TiSEM) is one of Europe’s leading centers for research in business and economics, with research rankings consistently among’s Europe’s top 10 across various business domain. In addition to the strong research focus and collegial research climate, it offers a wide variety of educational programs at the undergraduate and graduate level, with about 7,000 students enrolled. The School is well-connected to both policy makers and industry in the region and internationally, providing ample opportunities for creating impact with research.
Tilburg School of Economics and Management
About Zero Hunger Lab
The world hunger problem is immense. According to the United Nations, as many as 783 million people go to bed hungry tonight. Every 10 seconds, somewhere in our world a child dies of starvation and malnutrition. Zero Hunger Lab was founded in 2019, inspired by the United Nations Sustainable Development Goal 2 – zero hunger. Reducing the world’s hunger problem requires not only more efficient and effective (emergency) food aid. Even more important is to increase local capacity so that farmers, businesses, and communities can provide sustainable food security themselves and become independent of aid. That’s why Zero Hunger Lab researchers work not only from the campus in Tilburg, but also on site with organizations that have access to people in need, that have a good understanding of how to make communities and their food systems sustainable, and that co-create solutions with sustainable impact together with those same communities. More than 20 researchers work within the lab. They collaborate on even more research projects with numerous partners, including the World Food Programme, Voedselbanken Nederland, ZOA, WorldVision, UNDP, ZEROW, NFP, Bioversity and CIAD Alliance, Wageningen University & Research, INSEAD Humanitarian Research Group and Zero Poverty Lab.
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