Vacancy title: PhD position on rural residents’ engagements with hyperscale data centers and promised infrastructural integration – Subproject: FijiThe
Sociology of Development and Change (SDC) Group welcomes applicants for a fully salaried PhD position in the NWO-Vidi funded project ‘Sprawling Servers.’ The project investigates rural residents’ encounters with the promises for development that surround hyperscale data centers and related data infrastructures such as undersea cables. The project is particularly interested in how these promises, and people’s reactions to them, are embedded in broader experiences with rural revitalization and infrastructural development initiatives. The project also explores visions for liveable rural futures with, and beyond, hyperscalers. The project is based on comparative ethnographic research and brings together insights from: Fiji, Brazil, and the Netherlands.
The research is carried out by a project team consisting of three researchers: 2 PhDs and the Principal Investigator (PI), Dr Stephanie Ketterer (Associate Professor, SDC). The team will work together to further elaborate and refine the research approach, analyse the data, participate in conferences, and (co-)author publications.
You will be based at Wageningen University and conduct twelve months of in-depth ethnographic fieldwork in Fiji. The focus of your research will be on how residents engage with reports and rumours about data centers and other data infrastructures such as undersea cables in their daily lives, and how they relate to concerns about, among others, development, employment, the environment and the state. Your research will include a multi-temporal perspective, in that you will consider the history of infrastructural development in the region, its current iteration (focused on data infrastructures), and likely competing visions for the future.
Your duties and responsibilities include: - setting up and carrying out ethnographic fieldwork in a complex environment;
- setting up and completing a PhD dissertation within four years;
- authoring and co-authoring publications with other team members;
- participating in conferences, workshops, seminars and other scholarly activities;
- being part of the research team and help organise the overall work and strategy of the team;
- being an active member of the Sociology and Development and Change Group and the Section Space, Place and Society (participating in group activities, meetings, and seminars); and as a secondary affiliation also at the School of People, Environment, and Planning, Massey University, New Zealand
You will work hereYou will be part of the ‘Sprawling Servers’ research team, led by the PI Stephanie Ketterer. The team is team is embedded in the chair group of Sociology of Development and Change led by Prof. Robert Fletcher, and the
Section Space, Place and Society. Your supervisors will be
Dr Stephanie Ketterer (co-promotor),
Dr. Martijn Koster (promotor) and, from the School of People, Environment, and Planning, Massey University,
Prof. Glenn Banks.