Are you a social scientist or humanities scholar passionate about the transition to a sustainable, circular society? Join us as a postdoc in the NWO-funded project
ACT! Accelerating the Circular Transition. A New Paradigm for Society (ACT!). You play a crucial role in synthesising data, creating actionable insights, and translating theoretical concepts into practical applications, combining historical and social sciences expertise.
Your job ACT! addresses the urgent need to shift from a linear to a circular economy to tackle global challenges like resource scarcity, pollution, and climate change. By developing shared visions, advanced modelling tools, and coordinated pathways, the project integrates insights from science, policy, and practice to foster societal transitions. Structured into five interconnected work packages, it encompasses visioning futures, simulation modeling, pathway development, case studies, and impact integration.
As a postdoctoral researcher, you will identify and evaluate actionable pathways that enable stakeholders to make informed decisions that accelerate systemic change. You will develop and analyse transition pathways towards a circular society, integrating environmental, economic, and social dimensions. This involves using modelling tools, co-designing strategies with stakeholders, and assessing interventions to ensure they align with the project’s goals of sustainability, justice, and fairness. You work in close collaboration with different project areas, collaborating with teams focused on desirable futures, simulation tools, and real-world case studies. This leads to consistency across project outputs.
Your key responsibilities include:
- conducting research on historical and future transition pathways across multiple systems;
- exploring historical pathways and applying historical insights to contemporary challenges;
- co-designing and evaluating strategies for a circular society with stakeholders;
- preparing academic publications and contributing to project deliverables;
- engaging with stakeholders, including policymakers, businesses, and NGOs, to co-create and refine pathway analysis and possible interventions;
- presenting research findings at project meetings, workshops, and conferences;
- mentoring junior researchers and contributing to collaborative ACT! team efforts;
- contributing to Deep Transition Lab activities, and to the Social and Economic History Group within the faculty of Humanities.