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Göteborg

    Phd position stone age heritage as shared landscapes in the horizon marie sklodowska- curie action doctoral network archaeological coastal heritage: past, present and future of a hidden prehistoric leg - Göteborg, Sverige - Göteborg University

    Göteborg University
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    Reference number PAR 2024/432

    The University of Gothenburg tackles society's challenges with diverse knowledge students and 6 600 employees make the university a large and inspiring place to work and study. Strong research and attractive study programmes attract researchers and students from around the world. With new knowledge and new perspectives, the University contributes to a better future. Doctoral Candidate 8 "Stone age heritage as shared landscapes : Mapping concerns, actors & perspectives " General information on the DN ArCHe: The Doctoral Network ArCHe ( ) will train 10 PhD fellows for increasing the scientific and public value of Europe's archaeological coastal heritage, focusing on the legacy of Stone Age hunter-fisher-gatherers (c. 12, calBC). Including some of the earliest remains of human activity, this fragile and very heterogeneous legacy is crucial for understanding human engagement with the coast. Today, it is embedded in a variety of geographic settings across Europe, differing in environmental development, which face massive environmental and human threats, and is approached in various ways in cultural heritage management. ArCHe addresses the challenges of this fractured field with an innovative past-present-future approach focused on connecting the legacy from the past, its present status as archaeological heritage and prospects for its future protection and integration into lived landscapes. With six beneficiaries and nine associated partners, ArCHe unites academic research centres and non-academic organizations (cultural heritage sector, specialist organisations, museums and media). Within this joint platform for research and training, customized PhD projects will allow for cross-fertilization of knowledge among researchers and partners through scientific courses, workshops, conferences, applied secondments and transferable skills tuition. Training in archaeology, anthropology, critical heritage studies, heritage management, bioarchaeology, geology, oceanography, coastal engineering/ preservation and communication relevant to coastal heritage and environment will equip the ArCHe PhDs with advanced interdisciplinary and cross-regional knowledge and skills applicable to various academic and non-academic fields across Europe. Through best practices, the PhD projects will contribute to the visibility, preservation and sustainable integration of the vulnerable cultural heritage in coastal areas facing global environmental and development challenges. Information on the PhD-position: Reference (ArCHe-Doctoral candidate no.) DC8 Title of the project Stone age heritage as shared landscapes: Mapping concerns, actors and perspectives Recruiting institution and place of work School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg, Sweden Expected Start date 15 August 2024 or as negotiated Length of the project 48 months Salary:
    • Living + mobility allowance
    31 800 SEK (Swedish krona) per month salary
    • family allowance
    4950 SEK per month (only if eligible to these conditions: "Family" means persons linked to the researcher by marriage (or a relationship with equivalent status to a marriage recognised by the legislation of the country where this relationship was formalized) or dependent children who are actually maintained by the researcher)
    Project : DC8 investigates how existing and future archaeological activities in shared landscapes can be made locally relevant, sustainable, and attuned to contemporary dynamics at multiple scales. DC8 examines three case study areas across Europe (Norway, W-France, Latvia) that host coastal Stone Age hunter-fisher-gatherer heritage (excavated/not excavated), mapping different actors (such as local community heritage enthusiasts, municipal administrations, builders, planners, cultural heritage management actors, scientists, and environmental protection and conservation groups), interests, challenges and opportunities that may affect future management and use of these sites. Using anthropological and social science methods, DC8 provides an in-depth understanding of the socio-material dynamics that shape these shared landscapes, ranging from structural and economic conditions to social and cultural factors and environmental concerns. The comparative knowledge will be used to identify how prehistoric hunter-fisher-gatherer traces can best be integrated into future planning and use of these landscapes in a sensitive and inclusive manner, e.g., as places of learning in sustainable infrastructure development or tourism. DC8 fosters consciousness and reflexivity among site stakeholders (including researchers and other actors), both within and beyond the network, to strengthen public dialogue and inclusiveness. This project provides training for a career in sustainable natural and cultural resource management. Expected results consist of academic and popular science outputs, the former a dissertation and two co-authored journal articles. Data will be stored at UGOT. Academic secondments DC8 has a cross-regional comparative perspective through secondments to SE-Norway, W-France and Latvia. Academic secondments occur at the University of Oslo (2 months), CNRS/University of Rennes, France (2 months), and University of Latvia, Latvia (1 month), with the purpose of developing a comparative understanding of stone age heritage in different case-study sites. Non-academic secondments Viken County Council (Norway), to learn regional management of archaeological sites and administration of cultural landscapes with diverse stakeholders (1 month). Main supervisor Professor Maris Gillette, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg Co-supervisors Associate Professor A Mjærum, University of Oslo; Dr. Valdis Berzinš, University of Latvia Eligibility criteria The recruitment process for all Doctoral candidates in the HORIZON-MSCA-2022-DN ArCHe follows a common recruitment strategy, which is based on the European Commission's Code of Conduct of Recruitment MSCA-eligibility criteria
    • MSCA Mobility Rule: researchers must not have resided or carried out their main activity (work, studies, etc.) in the country of the recruiting beneficiary (Sweden) for more than 12 months in the 36 months immediately before their date of recruitment
    • All researchers recruited in a DN must be doctoral candidates (i.e. not already in possession of a doctoral degree at the date of the recruitment)
    Local eligibility criteria
    According to Chapter 7, paragraph 39 of the Higher Education Ordinance, applicants must have obtained a degree in the second-cycle (master's level), completed course requirements of at least 240 higher education credits, of which at least 60 are at the advanced level, or in some other way acquired essentially equivalent knowledge either within or outside of Sweden. In addition, applicants to the PhD in social anthropology must have completed least 90 university credits in social anthropology or an equivalent subject. Enrolment in local PhD-programme The successful applicant will be enrolled in the PhD programme in Social Anthropology, School of Global Studies, University of Gothenburg. Appropriate academic knowledge and skills Appropriate academic knowledge and skills for DC8 include experience in qualitative social science research methods and skills related to participant- action research. Knowledge of French or Norwegian/Swedish is a merit. Documentation to be sent in by the applicants
    • Letter of motivation
    • Project proposal (approximately 14,000 characters including spaces, references in addition) describing how the candidate would approach the given PhD-topic, with substantial reflections (not more than 4,200 characters including spaces) on how the specific PhD-project topic will contribute to achieving the general aims of the Doctoral network ArCHe as described on the ArCHe homepage ( ). A progress plan should be included.
    • CV (summarizing education, positions and academic work)
    • Complete list of publications and academic works
    • Proof of language proficiencies
    • Two reference persons to be contacted by the selection committee (name, relation to candidate, e-mail address and phone number)
    • Copy of MA degree diploma(s) and academic transcripts
    • A copy of the master's thesis in English or Scandinavian, or an academic publication in English or Scandinavian
    Assessment criteria
    • Scientific excellence to fit the PhD project, including the comparative ArCHe-perspective: international, interdisciplinary, intersectoral and with a past-present-future perspective
    • Fluent (oral and written) English skills as the project operates in English language. Knowledge of the language of the host country may be considered a merit.
    Merit: French or a Scandinavian language
    • Regarding the project proposal:
    - Originality, independent thinking
    - Knowledge of the state of the art and how the applicant goes beyond this - Theoretical and methodological foundation - Scientific ambition and innovativeness - Feasibility and progress plan - Suitability of the proposal not least in terms of the Doctoral network thought, and specifically regarding to ArCHe - Ethics implications All of the above are assessed based on submitted documentation and the interview. In addition, the following soft skills are assessed during the interview:
    • High motivation for doing their PhD in a MSCA-Doctoral network, and specifically ArCHe
    • Flexibility
    • Team-mindedness
    Important additional information Contact person/address/ telephone number in case of questions on the position Maris Gillette, maris.gillette @ , Deadline for application: May 24 th , 2024 The University works actively to achieve a working environment with equal conditions, and values the qualities that diversity brings to its operations. Salaries are set individually at the University. In accordance with the National Archives of Sweden's regulations, the University must archive application documents for two years after the appointment is filled. If you request that your documents are returned, they will be returned to you once the two years have passed. Otherwise, they will be destroyed. In connection to this recruitment, we have already decided which recruitment channels we should use. We therefore decline further contact with vendors, recruitment and staffing companies.

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