The Utrecht School of Law is seeking to appoint a PhD Researcher in law for a period of four years under the framework of our research platform ‘Empirical Research into Institutions for conflict resolution’ (ERI) and the Utrecht Centre for Regulation and Enforcement in Europe (RENFORCE). We conduct research, both ‘classical’ legal research and empirical research, into conflict resolution institutions under a rapidly changing context. Among other things, we study conflict resolution and law enforcement. We investigate how institutions work in legal practice, as this provides important insights into the performance of their tasks, transparency, responsibility and accountability. All of this is done in collaboration with other scientific disciplines and other legal faculties, at home and abroad.
About this PhD’s topic in particular
In the last decades, EU policy makers have increasingly relied on quasi-judicial review by internal appellate bodies within EU agencies. These bodies – hereinafter “Boards of Appeal” (BoA) – give citizens a venue to challenge the decisions of EU agencies, which are therefore held more accountable. While setting up BoA now seems almost standard practice for EU agencies with decision-making powers, little is known about the models that inspire them and their operation. This makes research on BoA all the more important to shed light on their origins and on current functioning. Among the questions surrounding the nature of BoA is whether their tasks should be regarded – from both a positive and a normative perspective – as either a part of the administrative action, a pure review of legality, or a hybrid form of scrutiny. These doubts regarding the intensity of the review by BoA also lead to a lack of clarity concerning their ability to reconsider the assessment of complex facts, and more broadly the intensity of their deference towards the entities they belong to. Similar questions also concern the judicial review of BoA decisions by the Court of Justice of the European Union.
The PhD researcher is invited to map the functioning of BoA with a legal and empirical analysis. This shall also address BoA from a comparative and historical perspective, taking into consideration the experience of objection procedures before similar pre-trial tribunals that are active in different (national) contexts. The research will investigate the ability of BoA to efficiently perform their tasks, which requires a thorough understanding of the factors that have an impact on the BoA functioning. These factors include, among other things, the expertise of the BoA components, the procedural rules and their results in terms of accuracy and timeliness of the decisions, and the intensity of the review. At the same time, the research should consider the implications of BoA operation for the rule of law, which involves inter alia whether BoA do, or should, fully comply with the fair trial principle and with all the impartiality requirements that apply to traditional courts. The research on all these aspects shall also be performed with quantitative and qualitative methods. The empirical basis for such an analysis shall include the case law of the BoA and the CJEU, interviews with members of BoA and other stakeholders, and surveys among various stakeholders.
As a PhD candidate, you will carry out your research in close cooperation with the research group on the Boards of Appeal (APPEAL Research Project), coordinated by the Utrecht School of Law, involving members of various BoA and primary European universities and research institutions. This will give you the opportunity of strengthening your empirical research with the access to an established network of experts.
As a PhD researcher you will:
- engage in supervised scientific research that will ultimately result in a doctoral thesis;
- participate in the relevant activities of the ERI platform and RENFORCE;
- participate in the educational programme for PhD candidates of Utrecht Law School;
- publish the interim results from the doctoral research in the form of conference papers, contributions to scientific journals, as well as through popular publications and presentations;
- participate in research activities and events, such as conferences, workshops and joint publications. There is also a possibility to organize one or more meetings around the thesis topic.
You will be hosted at the
Utrecht University School of Law, section of Jurisprudence, Constitutional and Administrative Law. During the doctoral research, you will write and publish a dissertation related to the aforementioned theme. The supervisor of the project is Prof Rob Widdershoven. Dr Matteo Gargantini and Dr Mira Scholten will be your co-supervisors.