We are inviting prospective researchers to apply for one of four PhD positions within the project ‘Strategic Climate Litigation’s Direct and Indirect Consequences for Democracies’. This project is funded by an ERC Consolidator Grant and runs 5 years. Within the project we develop the missing theoretical framework that captures the direct and indirect consequences of strategic climate litigation for the democratic process.
Four distinct PhD projects within the overall project investigate, based on the same multi-method approach to strategic climate litigation in 4 national (Germany, France, Netherlands & UK) and 2 European jurisdictions (EU & European Court of Human Rights), how strategic climate litigation interacts with the democratic process and how its (neglected) democratic potential could be realized. The four PhD projects focus on for aspects of this interaction: ‘representation & participation’, ‘international and European norms’, ‘climate science’, and ‘narrative creation’, respectively.
Applicants are asked to develop their own research proposals targeted at one of these four aspects of climate litigation. The whole research team consists of the principal investigator, two postdoctoral researchers, four PhD researchers, and two student assistants. The four PhD projects are based on coding of case law and contextual texts, stakeholder interviews, participant observations (3 months at a litigant organisation), and doctrinal analysis. The scoping of the individual PhD projects and the fine-tuning of the research questions are the first challenge of the successful applicant and the whole research team.
Do you enjoy: - Doing legal and social science research and writing on strategic climate litigation in Europe and its interconnections with democracy
- Being part of a vibrant research community and work in a team
- Participating in academic exchanges about legal developments regarding contemporary environmental, social, and economic concerns
- Challenging, reflecting on and speculating about the role of strategic climate litigation for democracy
What does this job entail? As a PhD researcher, you are expected to conduct innovative research leading to the completion and publication of a PhD dissertation within four years. As part of the team of researchers for the overarching project, you will design an individual research plan, from which you will develop your thesis. These tasks entail coordinating and agreeing with your supervisors on the content, planning and supervision of the trajectory. You will engage autonomously in the collection of data (eg document analysis, interviews) and present intermediate research results in internal discussions and potentially at workshops and conferences. Your teaching responsibilities could include teaching tutorials and supervising Master’s or Bachelor’s theses in European law.
The research component of your employment is 0,9 fte. The teaching component is 0,1 fte, which will be defined in mutual agreement and in line with the teaching needs of the section European law.