PHD Position at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in
Project “Asian Impacts on the Globalization of Knowledge: Marine Resources
during the Cold War”



The Max Planck Institute for the History of Science (Department I) is
looking to employ a



*Doctoral Candidate*



to start as soon as possible (salary: 50% TVöD E13) for a period of three
years.





The topic of the candidate’s dissertation should complement the research
undertaken in the project “Globalization Processes of Knowledge
<http://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/en/research/projects/dept1_400renn-globalization>”
and in the junior research group “Asian Impacts on the Globalization of
Knowledge: Marine Resources during the Cold War
<https://www.mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de/de/node/14268>.”



The position will be based at both the Max Planck Institute for the History
of Science and the Freie Universität in Berlin. The conferral of the
doctorate is expected to take place at the Freie Universität Berlin.



The projects “Globalization Processes of Knowledge” and “Asian Impacts on
the Globalization of Knowledge” seek to cooperate on a contribution to the
global history of knowledge – with an approach to history that doesn’t rely
on a one-sided diffusion model, but instead understands transfer processes
as multilateral transformations of knowledge systems. The aim is to
investigate the dynamics of such transformation processes using a
historical theory on the evolution of knowledge as well as through
approaches from the field of the global history of science. The project’s
central question is twofold: First, it asks which political, economic, and
cultural conditions shape processes of the globalization of knowledge? And
secondly, what effects do these globalization processes subsequently have
on the societal contexts in which they take place? Bearing these goals in
mind, we are looking for a doctoral project that incorporates both
multilateral relations and global conditionality.





*Suggested Topics for the Dissertation Project**: *

Living and nonliving (marine) resources (e.g. fish, plankton, pearls, or
submarine crude oil, manganese, gas), or, for instance, nuclear energy,
electricity, or wood could serve as starting points for an investigation
into corresponding phenomena such as development aid, resource conflict, or
environment and animal protection.



Of particular interest are projects that consider bi- or multilateral
relations within Asia (e.g. Japan-India, India-China, China-Russia,
Japan-Korea, Korea-China), or between (East) Asia and South America or
Africa, respectively (e.g. “South-South” cooperation). Projects that deal
with other regions and multilateral alliances – in particular Southeast
Asia – are extremely welcome.





*Expected Area of Focus:*

·         We are looking for a doctoral candidate who is interested in
writing their doctoral thesis within the context of the cooperation between
the Max Plank Institute for the History of Science and the research group
“East Asian Impacts on the Globalization of Knowledge: Marine Resources
during the Cold War.”

·         The thesis should use multilateral perspectives to examine the
interaction between processes in the globalization of knowledge and
societal conditions – in other words, the project should bear in mind the
global contingency of local phenomena.

·         The candidate will be expected to either contribute to the
development of the theoretical framework of a historical theory on the
evolution of knowledge, or to engage the methodological and theoretical
issues of the global history of knowledge.

·         The candidate is expected to undertake archival work and research
trips (financed).

·         Discussion and exchange within the projects will form a key part
of the research process.





*Necessary Qualifications:*

·         Completed university degree (MA level) in History, the History of
Science, Economic History, Regional Studies, or a related field.



Applicants with the following qualifications are particularly welcome:

·         Knowledge of either Chinese, Japanese, Korean, or Russian –
especially reading skills for the purpose of archival work.

·         Familiarity with the theoretical approaches of historical
epistemology, global and knowledge history, as well as with the theories of
cultural evolution.

·         Ability to produce academic publications in English



*Application:*

All application materials (including a CV, a letter of motivation, a copy
of the applicant’s MA certificate or verification that the applicant’s
thesis has already been submitted, a digital copy of the applicant’s MA
thesis in the form of a PDF, and proof of language abilities, if available)
should be submitted online at:

https://s-lotus.gwdg.de/mpg/mbwg/predoc_2016.nsf/application



 by *July* *24, 2016*. Only applications submitted in this way will be
considered.



We look forward to receiving applications from scholars of all
nationalities. The Max Planck Society aims to increase the percentage of
women on its scientific staff and therefore strongly encourages women to
apply. Furthermore, it is committed to promoting more handicapped
individuals and thus also encourages them to apply.



Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Boltzmannstr. 22, 14195
Berlin

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"gep-ed" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to