Are you a legal scholar specialized in international law of the sea and international environmental law and sustainability issues? Then the UU School of Law may be the place for you to be!
Wat ga je doen? As an Assistant Professor in the International and European Law department (part of the Utrecht School of Law), your activities will include both education and research.
You will teach both Bachelor’s and Master’s students. The
department of International and European Law offers Bachelor’s courses such as
Inleiding Europees Recht, European Law, International Law and the Master’s programmes Public International Law and Law & Sustainability in Europe. We also participate in courses of the Master’s progamme Marine Sciences at the Faculty of Geosciences. The courses you teach will be determined in consultation with you.
You will work in education teams, where colleagues support and learn from one another. This means that you will contribute to the improvement of our curriculum in areas such as: content development, didactics, teaching formats or professional skills. You will also build on your own education skills by completing the internal training course for the
University Teaching Qualification (UTQ/BKO). You will also eventually be assigned coordinating tasks pertaining to education.
You will devote 40% of your working hours to research in your field of expertise, as part of one of the
research programmes of the Utrecht School of Law. These programmes are: the Montaigne Centre for Rule of Law and Administration of Justice, the Utrecht Centre for Regulation and Enforcement in Europe (RENFORCE), the Utrecht Centre for Accountability and Liability Law (UCALL), the Utrecht Centre for European Research into Family Law (UCERF) and the Utrecht Centre for Water, Oceans and Sustainability Law (UCWOSL). In your first year of appointment, you are welcome to explore the activities of these programmes and meet their experts. After that, you will discuss your affiliation and research contribution with at least one of these programmes.