Tilburg Law School currently has 3 vacancies
for fully-funded PhD candidates in legal history for the CaPANES project on the
historical use of sovereignty concepts in cities of commerce.
Department:
Public Law & Governance
Location: Tilburg
Scientific area: Legal History
Full time equivalent: 0.8-1.0 FTE (32-40 hours per week)
Duration of employment contract: two years, with possible extension
Monthly full-time salary: €2,541 - €3,247 gross
Closing date vacancy: October 15, 2022
The department of Public Law and Governance
(PLG) is looking for 3 PhD Candidates who will be working within the project
‘Causal Pattern Analysis of Economic Sovereignty’ (CaPANES), which is funded by
the European Research Council (ERC, ERC Consolidator Grant 2021, nr 101044356).
PLG is a large, diverse and interdisciplinary department, home to nearly 100
academic staff and a range of legal and social science disciplines. You will
develop and grow in research, both individually and as part of a team of
ambitious scholars.
Job Description
As PhD Candidate in legal history, you will analyze the historical use of
sovereignty concepts in cities of commerce. The CaPANES project hypothesizes
that in the early modern period cities of commerce, even within states, had
foreign relations of their own and made strategic use of legal terms that
defined their economic sovereignty. The CaPANES project pursues
legal-historical analysis of both the domestic context of cities of commerce
and of their interactions with other cities and states. The CaPANES combines
qualitative and quantitative methods (social network analysis, modelling), and
aims to yield conclusions that are relevant also for discussions on present-day
economic sovereignty. The PhD Candidates will analyze the law, institutions and
correspondence of six cities of commerce (Florence, Toulouse, Rouen, Bruges,
Southampton and Lübeck). The first PhD position is concerned with Bruges and
Southampton (c. 1400-c. 1520), the second PhD position with Rouen and Lübeck
(c. 1450-c. 1620) and the third one with Florence and Toulouse (c. 1400-c.
1550). 20% of the appointment may be dedicated to teaching and/or
administration.
More info and full call here.
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