Postdoctoral researcher within the project Separation of Powers for 21st Century Europe

Postdoctoral researcher within the project Separation of Powers for 21st Century Europe

Published Deadline Location
26 May 19 Jun Amsterdam

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Job description

We are looking for an early-career researcher with a keen interest in pursuing research on the division and interaction of the different powers in the context of EU migration law as part of a 3-year international project. You have experience in researching migration (law) and are interested in engaging in empirical research and position it in a theoretical framework.

Project description

SepaRope (Separation of Powers for 21st Century Europe) is the first empirically-grounded and comparative project rethinking the theory and practices of separation of powers in present-day European Union.        Separation of powers, the classic model of decision-making, entrusts different state functions to different branches (legislative, executive, judiciary) and serves the double purpose of ensuring collective will-formation and control of those in power. The polyarchic and multilevel nature of the EU is not easily reconciled with the separation-of-powers-model, either at EU or national level. SepaRope demonstrates in combined horizontal and vertical inquiries how recent economic and political developments affect the EU’s institutional framework and the anchoring of EU decision- making in national legitimacy. It combines conceptual constitutional analysis with empirical research in three fields (Economic and Monetary Union, migration, trade), in which EU decision-making is controversial, rights-sensitive and illustrative of recent power shifts. Based on a joint conceptual framework for identifying and examining will- formation and control structures, SepaRope conducts autonomous but interlinked empirical and legal-analytical studies of the three branches in the three policy fields, respectively, exposing ever-increasing ‘grey areas’ of diffuse, ring-fenced, and informalised public power. The research team of the Amsterdam Centre for European Law and Governance (ACELG) at the University of Amsterdam will be engaged with the study focused on the executive.

The project engages with several legal subdisciplines including constitutional law, EU law and international law. It applies social science methods of collecting and evaluating empirical data.

Tasks

The successful applicant will be working in the sub-study on the executive within the SepaRope project. S/he will investigate the division and interaction of the different powers (legislative, executive, judiciary) in the context of EU migration law. In her/his research, the applicant will be expected to engage with issues of general constitutional and democratic importance, such as transparency/secrecy of international negotiations; legislative oversight; limits and reach of judicial control of external actions; as well as checks and balances emerging from the interaction of the national and European spheres within the EU’s polycentric and multilevel structures. The researcher should specialise in EU migration law, but engage in a comparative exchange with EU trade law, or EMU law. Issues of interest for this postdoctoral project include but are not limited to:

  • division of powers and control mechanism between EU and national actors and between different EU actors in negotiating, agreeing and executing EU and international migration law/informal arrangements;
  • the European Parliament’s direct and indirect influences over negotiating and agreeing migration law/informal arrangements examining a number of case studies.

You will:

  • develop and execute your research autonomously, in mutually beneficial collaboration with the other project team members, and under the supervision of Professor Christina Eckes;
  • engage autonomously in the collection of empirical data (interviews; document analysis);
  • publish your research in peer-reviewed journals in line with our open access policy and in publications aimed at the general public (e.g. blogs);
  • present intermediate research results at workshops and conferences;
  • participate in the overall work on the SepaRope project by e.g.contributing to the organization of meetings and events, as well as giving guidance to more junior researchers.

Specifications

University of Amsterdam (UvA)

Requirements

The successful applicant:

  • has a PhD degree in law or another relevant discipline;
  • has experience in researching migration (law);
  • has a strong motivation to do high quality research;
  • is proficient in English;
  • has excellent scientific writing, planning and communication skills;
  • has experience with methods of adjacent disciplines and their respective methods (i.e. history, (legal) philosophy, political economy, political science, etc.);
  • has an interest (and some experience) in conceptual and theoretical inquiries into the separation/division of powers.

Conditions of employment

Our offer

The employment contract will be initially for the period of one year, with the intention of extending the contract for another two years, i.e. until the end of the project, depending on good performance. There is no possibility for a permanent position. The position as postdoctoral researcher will start on 1 September 2020 or, if particular reasons justify it, as soon as possible thereafter.

The gross full-time monthly salary will be in accordance with the salary scales for Researchers at Dutch universities, scale 11 (Collective Labour Agreement of Dutch Universities) ranging from €3,637 to €4,978 gross per month. Secondary benefits at Dutch universities are attractive and include 8% holiday pay and an 8.3% end-of-year Bonus. applicable.

What else do we offer?

Your research will be carried out within the Amsterdam Centre for European Law and Governance under the guidance of ACELG director and project leader Prof. Christina Eckes. ACELG unites a diverse group of researchers with an interest in the institutional, constitutional and economic law of the European Union. The centre has a strong track-record of excellent research and sustains a dynamic research culture through a series of events and initiatives.    

Additonally, you will profit from the collaboration in an international team that consists of researchers from the        Centre for European Research (CERGU) at the University of Gothenburg and the Erik Castrén Institute of International Law and Human Rights (ECI) at the University of Helsinki.

The positions are first and foremost research positions; yet the successful applicant will have the opportunity to be involved in individually agreed teaching in the field of European law.

Employer

University of Amsterdam

With over 5,000 employees, 30,000 students and a budget of more than 600 million euros, the University of Amsterdam (UvA) is an intellectual hub within the Netherlands. Teaching and research at the UvA are conducted within seven faculties: Humanities, Social and Behavioural Sciences, Economics and Business, Law, Science, Medicine and Dentistry. Housed on four city campuses in or near the heart of Amsterdam, where disciplines come together and interact, the faculties have close links with thousands of researchers and hundreds of institutions at home and abroad.  

The UvA’s students and employees are independent thinkers, competent rebels who dare to question dogmas and aren’t satisfied with easy answers and standard solutions. To work at the UvA is to work in an independent, creative, innovative and international climate characterised by an open atmosphere and a genuine engagement with the city of Amsterdam and society.

Department

Amsterdam Law School – Department of Public International Law and European Law

The Amsterdam Law School prides itself on its international orientation and strong social commitment. This is reflected by both its research and educational activities. The Amsterdam Law School offers three Bachelor’s programmes, including the interdisciplinary English-language Bachelor Politics, Psychology, Law and Economics (PPLE) in cooperation with two other Faculties, as well as a variety of Master's programmes, several of which are taught exclusively in English (i.e. International and European Law, European Private Law, International Criminal Law, and Law & Finance). The Amsterdam Law School prepares students for a wide variety of legal careers including law firms, government, business and industry, the national and international judiciary, public service, human rights advocacy, and academia. With 3,700 students and over 400 staff members, it is one of the largest law faculties in the Netherlands.

The Amsterdam Centre for European Law and Governance (ACELG) is one of the leading researcher centres within the Law School. It is nationally and internationally recognized as a research centre that makes high level contributions to the academic and policy debate on legal and governance processes in Europe. ACELG ensures the quality of its research by providing for a vibrant environment, in which our researchers are encouraged to pursue excellence, seek recognition in the scholarly discourse, both internationally and nationally, attract external research funding, and publish in the leading peer reviewed journals.

Specifications

  • Postdoc
  • Law
  • max. 38 hours per week
  • €3637—€4978 per month
  • Doctorate
  • 20-309

Employer

University of Amsterdam (UvA)

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Location

Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, 1018 WV, Amsterdam

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