Are you eager to investigate the intersection of AI, society, and governance? We are seeking a PhD candidate to join our research team as part of the EU Horizon FORSEE project, dedicated to improving our understanding of what successful AI for society as a whole requires. As part of an international consortium, you’ll help examine and develop feedback mechanisms with a greater scope of reporting and contextual diversity to improve AI oversight and accountability across sectors like public administration and energy. If you're ready to shape a future where AI benefits all, we’d love to hear from you!
While the technological capabilities of AI applications are advancing rapidly, we lack a clear understanding of what defines successful AI for society as a whole and of the conditions of possibility for successful AI deployment. For the most part successful AI has been defined in technological and economic terms: as a set of scalable technologies that improve accuracy and efficiency in tasks associated with problem solving and cognition; and as contributing to increases in productivity and economic growth. However, AI applications are not deployed in a vacuum: rather, they are conceived, developed, deployed and received in a social context, and as such they both reflect and reinforce existing social (mis)conceptions, biases and faults, as well as aspirations and hopes. To understand what makes AI systems succeed or fail, we need to know for whom, and under what conditions. As such it is important not only to think about AI as posing definable risks and opportunities, but to also analyse how these occur in societal domains, and where along the AI production and deployment process they occur.
As AI becomes used at scale, understanding what constitutes a successful AI application requires feedback loops to identify and track emergent effects of these applications as well as different and changing conceptions of their success or failure. Given that AI will be deployed in many social and administrative contexts, this requires more than the current governance paradigm of centralised, expert-led regulation. This project will investigate possibilities for feedback mechanisms with greater coverage, scope of reporting, and contextual diversity. Using ethnographic methods (interviewing, participant observation in relation to real-world applications of AI), this project will develop both conceptual tools and concrete measures for expanding the scope and reach of AI oversight by integrating it with existing sectoral and collective-level mechanisms for democratic feedback and accountability. Moreover, it will map and categorize the risks and opportunities of AI applications that emerge within sectors, such as the energy sector or public administration. This mapping will be used to examine which of the risks and opportunities are within the focus of current (regulatory) governance of AI and which fall outside of their purview.
Linked to the EU Horizon project FORSEE, this PhD will also lead junior researchers on tasks such as reviews of the regulatory literature and applicable legal frameworks, and will collaborate with other universities within the FORSEE group to produce a methodological roadmap for operationalising systematic and robust feedback loops with civil society, and a governance roadmap to guide the sustainable implementation of such feedback loops.
The successful candidate is expected to manage some of FORSEE’s administrative tasks of TILT, join and present at project meetings, and may be asked to perform other duties occasionally which are not included above, but which will be consistent with the PhD topic and position (e.g. assist with the organising workshops or conferences).
Besides this, the candidate is expected to participate in the daily academic life at TILT such as workshops and seminars, and – as part of the academic training – to conduct a limited amount of teaching and Master`s thesis supervision, and some other research and educational tasks, as well as some project administration (the division of tasks is approximately 80% research and 20% other tasks).
This job is situated at TILT, the Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology and Society.
This job is suited for you if you are interested in interdisciplinary collaboration and creative thinking; curious about developing new methodologies and are familiar with researching the effects of technology within, and in collaboration with, civil society. You have some experience with qualitative empirical research and have an affinity with Artificial Intelligence or digital technologies.
Below you can find the qualifications we consider important for the position.
To maintain a vibrant and active university community, it is important that we meet each other regularly and that the connection between us remains good. Therefore, the premise is that all staff members carry out their work in the Netherlands.
TILT is a diverse workplace, and we welcome applicants from all backgrounds. We encourage all qualified applicants, including those of minoritised ethnic or gender identity, people with disabilities, and members of other groups underrepresented in academia, to apply. If you are not sure if you are *the candidate* for this position, we welcome your application nevertheless.
International PhD’s with scholarships below the IND income standard (€1,564) are unfortunately not eligible for this vacancy.
Our offer
Tilburg University offers excellent benefits in a pleasant working environment:
For more information, see our website and the CLA 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 Tilburg Law School
Since its founding in 1963, Tilburg Law School has become one of the leading law schools in Europe. Through top research and the provision of high-quality university education, the School contributes to society. Tilburg Law School is organized into five Departments: Public Law and Governance; Law, Technology, Markets and Society; Private, Business and Labour Law; the Fiscal Institute Tilburg; and Criminal Law. The mission of the School is to understand and improve the role of law and public administration in addressing the social problems of today and tomorrow. Through research and education, our scholars contribute to that mission.
More than 4,000 students pursue a Bachelor's, pre-Master's or Master's degree at Tilburg Law School. Through this education, we train students in law, public administration, and data science. The Tilburg Educational Profile (TEP) is unique in the Netherlands. Central to it are three core concepts: knowledge, skill and character. A university education provides students with the latest substantive knowledge and trains them to be critical thinkers and resilient professionals. In addition, the School is committed to innovative educational concepts and, partly in response to the coronavirus crisis, has invested heavily in the quality of online education and in innovative didactic tools to make and keep students inquisitive.
Tilburg Law School's research is highly regarded nationally and internationally. The Tilburg Law School Departments work closely together in their research in four signature research programs: 1) Global Law and Governance; 2) Law and Security; 3) Connecting Organizations; and 4) Regulating Socio-Technical Change.
About TILT
The Department Tilburg Institute for Law, Technology and Science (TILT) is home to education and research on the effects of socio-technical change on the regulation and governance of economic activities in an era where information technology is a key driver of innovation. TILT is one of the leading research groups in Europe at the intersection of law, technology, and society. It is premised on the multidisciplinary study of socio-technical change, aiming at understanding the interaction of technology and social and normative practices in order to clarify how regulatory challenges of socio-technical change can be addressed.
Would you like to know more before applying? Feel free to contact Feel free to contact Merel Noorman at +31134664035 or m.e.noorman@tilburguniversity.edu.
We kindly invite you to apply before 6 January 2025; this can only be done online. Address your cover letter to Merel Noorman and attach your CV. In order to make a good selection, we also ask you to provide the following documents:
Letter selection is scheduled after the closing date; you will receive notification from us shortly thereafter. The first selection interviews will take place on 16 January 2025 and the second on 23 January 2025.
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