PhD researcher The Functions of Multilateral Environmental Agreements: Beyond Effectiveness as Implementation via EGU

Open Universiteit

Heerlen, Netherlands šŸ‡³šŸ‡±

Position: PhD researcher The Functions of Multilateral Environmental Agreements: Beyond Effectiveness as Implementation


Employer: Open University of the Netherlands – Environmental Sciences

Flexible studying anywhere in the Netherlands and Flanders (Belgium)
The Open Universiteit is the part-time university in the Netherlands. Students follow personalised and activating academic distance education and disciplinary research is carried out within the various fields of science. Students can complete bachelor and master programmes, but also shorter programmes. The characteristics of education are openness, flexibility and quality (see www.ou.nl/rankings). The Open Universiteit has over 17,000 students and more than 750 employees. The OU has branches in the Netherlands and Belgium (see www.ou.nl/studiecentra). The main office is located in Heerlen. The latest technologies and educational insights are applied both in the bachelorā€™s and masterā€™s programmes and courses and in projects and programmes with partners. Nationally and internationally, the OU plays an important role in the innovation of higher education. Education is interwoven with research, which also ensures that the current state of science is incorporated. The Open Universiteit invests not only in disciplinary research in nine scientific fields, but also in research in a multidisciplinary programme: Innovating for resilience.

Department of Environmental Sciences
The Department of Environmental Sciences is part of the Faculty of Science. The Department embodies the commitment of the Open Universiteit to excellence in the environmental sciences, science for impact, and lifelong learning in the sustainability domain. The Department brings together people working on integrated environmental modelling, sustainability learning, and environmental governance and has about 20 team members. The research of the Department aims to contribute to the understanding of social-ecological systems, the development of solutions for environmental issues, and to the wider body of knowledge that helps societies reach their sustainability goals.
For more information about this vacancy you can contact: Dr. Lisanne Groen, e-mail: lisanne.groen@ou.nl

Homepage: https://www.ou.nl/en/onderzoek-natuurwetenschappen


Location: Heerlen, Netherlands


Sector: Academic


Relevant divisions

Biogeosciences (BG)
Energy, Resources and the Environment (ERE)
Natural Hazards (NH)


Type: Contract


Level: Student / Graduate / Internship


Salary

Fixed-term contract: for a period of 15 months. The appointment will be extended to 4 years when progress and performance are good. Salary amounts to ā‚¬ 2.541,= gross per month upon commencement, in case of full employment.


Required education: Master


Application deadline: 4 June 2023


Posted: 2 May 2023


Job description

Are you ready for the start of your academic career? Do you want to become part of an enthusiastic group of colleagues, who seek to push the boundaries of environmental knowledge and teach in the highest graded educational programmes in the Netherlands? Do you have the right skills to do cutting-edge research in an interdisciplinary setting? Then apply for a PhD position in the project ā€˜The Functions of Multilateral Environmental Agreements: Beyond Effectiveness as Implementationā€™ at the Department of Environmental Sciences at the Open Universiteit.
Today, we are faced with pressing global environmental problems, of which climate change and biodiversity loss are key. To tackle these problems, rule setting at the international level is of great importance. That is why many multilateral environmental agreements (MEAs) have been put in place over the past 50 years. Think of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and its Paris Agreement, and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), for example.
However, MEAs are often criticised for not being effective enough. Biodiversity loss is progressing at alarming rates and climate change is far from under control. Still, practically all MEAs once created continue to exist, including the CBD and UNFCCC, and regularly new ones are added. It is therefore important to look beyond effectiveness and improve our understanding of other functions of MEAs such as facilitating learning, involving stakeholders, establishing order by assigning roles to actors, identifying emerging issues and framing them, or symbolic functions.
In this PhD project, you will scrutinise various MEAs to identify their functions and to answer the questions of how and why these functions came about. With the results of this research, you will contribute important new insights to the academic literature on global environmental governance. Moreover, you will also provide the necessary policy recommendations for those working in MEA secretariats or as country negotiators, stimulating reflection on their work, which could lead to improvements of organisational routines.
The project will involve conducting a (systematic) literature review, building a theoretical framework, studying a list of all MEAs (including those under negotiation) and selecting those to look at in greater detail. Methods to apply can be both qualitative and quantitative (e.g. case studies, process tracing, qualitative comparative analysis, surveys, text mining, etc.).
As a PhD researcher in this project, you will be able to contribute to broader academic and societal debates on the role that global environmental governance could and should play in the various systems transitions that have to be realised, in terms of energy, nature, agriculture, water, infrastructure, health, etc. In this context, we need to know more about what MEAs do and donā€™t do and why, and that is what you can find out!

TASKS
The PhD candidate will:
engage in supervised scientific research that will ultimately result in a doctoral thesis;
participate in the relevant activities of the ā€œInnovating for Resilienceā€ programme and the Department of Environmental Sciences;
participate in the organisation of scientific and practice-oriented events (workshops, conferences), in close collaboration with the supervisors;
follow a tailor-made course programme for PhD-candidates of the OU Graduate School and the National Research School SENSE;
publish research results in the form of conference papers, contributions to peer-reviewed scientific journals, as well as through popular publications and presentations.

REQUIREMENTS
Candidates must:
have a Masterā€™s degree in a relevant field: political science, international relations, environmental governance, international environmental law, or the like;
have experience with or a strong interest in multilateral environmental agreements and their effectiveness, (systematic) literature review, case study research, process tracing, qualitative comparative analysis, surveys, text mining;
be able to demonstrate excellent scientific writing and communication skills, as well as relevant collaborative and social skills;
have experience working in an interdisciplinary team;
be fluent in English (spoken and in writing).
Applicants must be strongly motivated for doctoral studies, possess the ability to work independently and perform critical analysis and also possess good levels of cooperative and communicative abilities. Teaching experience and publications are not required but are considered an advantage if the candidate can demonstrate experience in these areas.


How to apply

See: https://www.academictransfer.com/nl/327271/phd-position-the-functions-of-multilateral-environmental-agreements-beyond-effectiveness-as-implementation/
LinkedIn page: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7059177490023378944/


POSITION TYPE

ORGANIZATION TYPE

EXPERIENCE-LEVEL

DEGREE REQUIRED

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