The Erasmus School of History, Culture and Communication (ESHCC) at the Erasmus University Rotterdam is pleased to announce a challenging PhD position that examines
democratising heritage tourism as part of the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Doctoral Network fellowship titled “
HERITOUR - Enhancing collaborative synergies between Cultural HERItage and TOURism” About HERITOURHERITOUR is a
Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) Doctoral Network that examines how the cultural heritage and tourism sectors can collaborate more effectively to address shared challenges and reduce the negative impacts of tourism. Cultural heritage represents a major segment of contemporary tourism, yet increasing touristification and overtourism have intensified debates about environmental degradation, social disruption, and pressures on heritage sites. Although European and international policy frameworks promote ethical and sustainable tourism, heritage and tourism governance remains fragmented, with sectors operating under different institutional structures and priorities. HERITOUR investigates how current collaborations function and how cross-sectoral policies can be developed within a democratic and regenerative governance model. The project focuses on hybridisation, sustainability, resilience, and democratisation, and provides interdisciplinary training for Doctoral Candidates.
HERITOUR is a collaboration between Erasmus University Rotterdam, University of Stavanger, Middle East Technical University, University of Aruba, Mid Sweden University, and the University of Granada.
Successful Doctoral Candidates will be seconded at heritage and tourism organisations for the total duration of three months during the employment period.
A total of 10 PhD vacancies are available across the six universities. For more information, check the individual vacancy pages of the universities, or check the project website
www.heritour.euAbout the research projectThis project investigates how inclusivity can be strengthened through collaboration between the heritage and tourism sectors, focusing on the co-production of tools and guidelines that support regenerative and inclusive engagement at heritage tourism sites. By connecting key stakeholders, the project fosters shared responsibility for managing cultural resources while balancing social, economic, and environmental sustainability. Using multi-sited ethnographic methods, it identifies everyday narratives and practices of inclusion and exclusion, revealing how visitors, local communities, and practitioners experience heritage spaces. The project also critically engages with the growing securitisation of heritage and tourism, whereby heritage sites are increasingly framed as objects of risk requiring surveillance, control, and protection. While safeguarding heritage from vandalism, conflict, and over-tourism is essential, securitised approaches can unintentionally marginalise certain groups and restrict access. By integrating protection strategies with inclusive governance models, this research project seeks to reconcile heritage security with social justice and participatory tourism development.
This PhD position (DC-8) is embedded in Work Package 4 “democratisation” and is supervised by Dr. Naomi Oosterman, Prof.dr. Stijn Reijnders (both Erasmus University Rotterdam) and Dr. Luc Alofs (University of Aruba). PhD candidates will be seconded at the Monument Fund Aruba (Aruba) and Sámi Museum Gaaltije in Östersund, Sweden.
Job descriptionThe successful candidate is expected to be involved in:
Research (1.0 fte) - Conducting PhD research.
- Publishing and presenting research results in the form of articles in international peer reviewed journals and papers at international conferences.
- Participating in intensive training schools as part of the HERITOUR training framework.
- Writing a dissertation within the appointment duration of three years.
- Partake in two secondments at the Monuments Fund in Oranjestad, Aruba and Sámi Museum Gaaltije in Östersund, Sweden.
- Taking part in seminars, workshops etc. that are organised by the Erasmus Research Institute for Media, Culture, History and Society (ERMeCHS), the department, as well as the HERITOUR consortium.