Dear All,

Please find below a call for applicants for a fully funded PhD on offshore wind 
governance, here on our beautiful campus at the University of East Anglia 
(Norwich, UK). Unfortunately, due to funding restrictions funding is only 
available to to applicants eligible for ‘Home’ fees status, including UK 
nationals and most EU nationals with ‘settled’ or ‘pre-settled’ status.

Best wishes,

Pierre

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PhD project Winds of Change: A Comparative Approach to the Governance of 
Offshore Wind Developments

Supervisors: Dr Pierre Bocquillon and Dr Jenny Fairbrass, University of East 
Anglia (Norwich, UK)

Please contact Pierre Bocquillon at [email protected] for further 
information.

Leverhulme Doctoral Scholarship Programme on the 'Critical Decade for Climate 
Change'

ClimateUEA is delighted to present a newly created PhD studentship award 
programme entitled Critical Decade for Climate Change Leverhulme Doctoral 
Scholars, directed by Professor Corinne Le Quéré and Deputy Director Dr Mark 
Tebboth.

Project Overview
Offshore wind is an increasingly mature technology that has a central role to 
play in the energy transition in the critical decade for climate change. 
Offshore wind technologies have developed rapidly – including in the UK – as 
they offer large volumes of renewable electricity at competitive prices while 
being less subject to local opposition. Yet, they also require large 
infrastructure developments, conducive policy and regulatory environments, and 
have often been contested on environmental, economic, or aesthetic grounds. The 
project will investigate the governance issues associated with offshore wind 
(e.g. infrastructure siting, regulation, public participation) to better 
understand and navigate them. How have these challenges been addressed in 
different political and regulatory contexts? What lessons can be drawn for 
future developments?

Research methodology
The research will be comparative, including a case study of the East of England 
– a major area for offshore wind in the UK – and in-depth analysis of other 
experiences from across the world, depending on your geographical interests and 
language skills. For that purpose, you will (a) collate and analyse 
(quantitatively and/or qualitatively) a new comparative database of issues and 
stakeholder positions based on documentary analysis (including policy, business 
and media sources) and (b) undertake in-depth interviews with national and 
local stakeholders (energy companies, planning authorities, NGOs), elected 
representatives and citizens.

Training
This PhD provides you with the opportunity to develop your skills in the 
collection of original social science data, documentary analysis and 
interviewing, scientific writing, and communicating research insights to 
academic and policy audiences. You will receive relevant research training 
through UEA DTPs and advanced training at specialised methods schools (e.g. 
Essex). You will be associated with the world leading Tyndall Centre for 
Climate Change Research and the interdisciplinary Centre for Competition 
Policy, which has an extensive track record of research and engagement on 
energy policy and regulation.

Person specification
You will have a demonstrable interest in energy and climate politics and 
policy-making; a degree in Politics, Business, Geography, Sociology or 
equivalent subjects; experience in independent qualitative/quantitative 
empirical research (e.g. through completion of a dissertation); and would like 
to join a dynamic interdisciplinary team.

Entry Requirements
Acceptable first degree in Politics, Business, Geography, Sociology or 
equivalent subjects. The standard minimum entry requirement is 2:1 in a 
Bachelor's degree and a Master's degree in a relevant field.

Funding
This project has been shortlisted for funding by the Critical Decade for 
Climate Change programme, which will award PhD studentship funding from the 
Leverhulme Trust and UEA’s Faculties of Social Sciences and Science.

Successful candidates will be awarded a PhD studentship that pays tuition fees, 
a stipend (£17,668 p.a. for 2022/23), and funding to support research costs. 
Studentship funding is only available to applicants eligible for ‘Home’ fees 
status, including UK nationals and most EU nationals with ‘settled’ or 
‘pre-settled’ status.

Important details:
Application deadline – 18th January 2023
Location: University of East Anglia, Norwich, UK.
Start Date: October 2023
Mode of Study: Full-time or Part-time


--
Dr Pierre 
Bocquillon<https://research-portal.uea.ac.uk/en/persons/pierre-bocquillon>
Lecturer in Politics, School of PPL, University of East Anglia
UEA, Norwich Research Park, Norwich, NR4 7TJ
Mobile: +44(0)7518906391
Chat with me 
<https://teams.microsoft.com/l/chat/0/[email protected]> on 
Teams[cid:bd231fb2-ef2e-4a32-bac0-25e0c4e41dce]

<https://www.uea.ac.uk/ppl/people/academic-staff/profile/p-bocquillon>

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