Tuesday, February 13, 2018
University of Oslo, Norway: Paid Ph.D. Research Fellowships in Public International Law
Here's a reminder that the University of Oslo Faculty of Law is offering up to two paid Ph.D. Research Fellowships within the project "State Consent to International Jurisdiction: Conferral, Modification and Termination" under the leadership of Prof. Dr. Freya Baetens. The fellowships will be at the PluriCourts Centre for the Study of the Legitimate Roles of the Judiciary in the Global Order, Department for Public and International Law, Faculty of Law, University of Oslo. The project is funded by the Research Council of Norway, as part of the Young Research Talents grant programme. Click here for more information about the project, including the main project outline.
- The quality of the project described in the Ph.D. research proposal and the extent to which it contributes to the comparative analysis of international adjudicatory bodies that is central to the main project (focusing on at least two of the following adjudicatory systems: WTO, ICC, regional human rights courts, and ISDS);
- Academic and personal ability to conduct assigned research tasks within the allotted time frame;
- Good co-operative skills and ability to work as part of a research team;
- Theoretical and/or methodological competence.
- Have obtained an LL.B. and an LL.M. degree (or equivalent, such as a J.D. degree) cum laude (or equivalent, such as first class honors);
- Have experience in conducting scholarly research (through the writing of an extensive LL.M. thesis, publications or prior work experience as a research assistant);
- Be fluent in English (applicants who are not native speakers of English must document their proficiency in English);
- Have a passive working knowledge of one or more of the other U.N. languages: Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian, or Spanish (command of a Scandinavian language is not a condition for this position);
- Have completed one or more internships, traineeships, or law clerkships (or similar) with an international or regional court, or arbitral institution, or have relevant legal practice experience as a member of the bar in their country of origin.
- A three-year contract without any teaching duties
- Salary of between NOK 436 900 to 490 900 gross per year (approx. EUR 45 000 to EUR 50 000; or USD 56 000 to 63 000)
- An inspiring and friendly working environment
- A favorable pension arrangement
- Attractive welfare arrangements
And, of course, you get to be in Norway!
- Cover letter (statement of motivation and research interests)
- CV (summarizing education, positions, academic work) - maximum three pages
- Copies of certificates and academic diplomas, including grade transcripts (If the original language is not English, an English language translation must be provided)
- Project description (approximately 5 pages), including a progress plan. A complete list of academic publications
- Up to 3 publications (If the publications are written by more than one author, a declaration of authorship and of the contribution of the applicant should be submitted)
- A list of 3 to 5 referees (only name, function, affiliation, relation to candidate, e-mail address and telephone number) - no submission of letters is required at the application stage
Hat tip to Freya Baetens, Cand. Jur. / Lic. Jur. (Ghent), LL.M. (Columbia), Ph.D. (Cambridge), Professor of Public International Law, PluriCourts Centre, University of Oslo Faculty of Law
(mew)
https://lawprofessors.typepad.com/international_law/2018/02/university-of-oslo-norway-paid-phd-research-fellowships-in-public-international-law.html