Dear colleagues,

We're hiring a PhD candidate to work on Open Data Licensing as part of a
Marie Curie International Training Network.
Among the 15 Early Career Researchers of this distributed and
interdisciplinary programme on open data, one will be a graduate in law:
https://odeco-research.eu/#training

Please forward the offer to your local mailing-lists or recent master
students who might be interested:
https://www.euraxess.fr/jobs/659192

To comply with European funding rules, the candidate must not have resided
or carried out their main activity (work, studies, etc.) in France for more
than 12 months in the 3 years immediately before the recruitment date
(January 2022) and only applications through Euraxess portal can be
considered

Many thanks,
Melanie

-- 
Melanie Dulong de Rosnay
Associate research professor, CNRS
https://cis.cnrs.fr/melanie-dulong/
Center for Internet and Society of CNRS <https://cis.cnrs.fr/about/>

--
OFFER DESCRIPTION

This fully funded PhD position is part of the EU Horizon 2020 Marie
Sklodowska Curie ITN project entitled "ODECO: Towards a Sustainable Open
Data ECOsystem" (https://odeco-research.eu/). ODECO is a four-year project
involving 15 PhD projects covering each a specific part of the open data
ecosystem. The central aim of the ODECO consortium network is to train the
next generation of creative and innovative early stage open data
researchers, to unlock their creative and innovative potential to address
current and future challenges in the creation of user driven, circular and
inclusive open data ecosystems.

Current developments in the field of open data are characterised as highly
fragmented. Open data ecosystems are often developed in different domains
in isolation of each other and with little involvement of potential users,
resulting in approaches that significantly limit open data reusability for
users. This reduces innovation and the ability to create new valued added
goods and services. Isolated domains also undermine interoperability for
users acting as a barrier to data sharing. Efforts are also uncoordinated
in open data training and research, where multidisciplinary approaches are
scant.

Bringing together different sectors (research, private sector, government,
non-profit) and different perspectives (public administration, law,
business, engineering), ODECO aims to address the central challenge of
realizing a user driven, circular and inclusive open data ecosystem.
Through its novel research and training programme, ODECO will provide
early-stage researchers with relevant open data knowledge, skills and
research experience.

The offered PhD position on “Open Licensing of Non-Government Data” is to
design new legal instruments to include private actors as producers and
sharers of (open) data and data generated by private companies and users on
private platforms, by:

- Investigating from a legal perspective novel value distribution and
incentive mechanisms and design how a new sustainable distribution of value
in the open data ecosystem may be implemented in licenses based on
alternative values defined in collaboration with other PhDs and members of
the ODECO project teams working in other disciplines.

- Investigating whether commons-based approaches can be developed to openly
license commercial data and data volunteered by citizens on public,
commons, and private platforms, and ported from other environments (e.g.,
medical and microbial commons, data pools).

- Exploring legal mechanisms that will facilitate and incentivise the
release of non-government data as open data in open data commons, data
pools or data collaboratives) as well as private and user-generated data
contributed to public and private platforms (e.g., social media).

- Ensuring compatibility between commercial, and individual (data
protection, privacy and sharing) interests.

During the PhD, the candidate will conduct this research, prepare
scientific articles presenting the research at conferences and in journals,
and contribute to deliverables of the project with the project team.

To enable the candidate to do this successfully, the candidate will be
supervised by Professor Lucie Cluzel-Metayer at the University Paris
Nanterre Center for Research on Public Law (CRDP, see
https://crdp.parisnanterre.fr/), and Dr. Mélanie Dulong de Rosnay at the
CNRS Center for Internet and Society (CIS, see https://cis.cnrs.fr/).

This is a joint appointment: the candidate will be enrolled at University
Paris Nanterre doctoral law school which will deliver the PhD degree, and
be part of the CIS team at CNRS which will provide a full-time employment
contract.

In addition to academic co-supervision, the candidate will be enrolled in
the University of Paris Nanterre doctoral law school programme activities,
with conferences and personal and professional training courses with other
PhD candidates in law.

The candidate will take part to the ODECO interdisciplinary training
activities with the other teams including 14 other PhD candidates of the
project, and benefit from a career development plan.

The candidate will work in an environment allowing mentoring as a full
member of the CIS team, hosted in a CNRS shared office in Paris 17ème
arrondissement with colleagues in sociology of technology involved in
French-based, European and international projects (among others: a lab on
open science pioneered by the Minister of Research, the SoBigData++ H2020
project) and hosting a network of 350 researchers working in the Internet
and Society field, including working groups on open science and digital
commons policy.

As a Marie Curie ITN researcher, the candidate will have the opportunity to
conduct practical internships at universities and case studies at excellent
open data intermediaries through the EU ITN network, in your case, at the
University of Delft co-supervised by Prof. Ploeger and at Doctrine, a
French-based legaltech company).

Contract duration: 36 months

Monthly gross salary: 3452 euros + 600 euros of Marie Curie mobility + 500
euros if the candidate has family dependents.
(About 3400 euros net after taxes, up to about 4000 euros if the candidate
has family dependents.)

CNRS will recruit prospective talented researchers of any nationality,
gender, culture, religion, sexual orientation or age.

Mobility requirements:

Since this PhD position is part of a Horizon Marie Curie ITN project,
several hard selection criteria apply to be eligible:

• You comply with the early-stage researcher definition: at the time of
recruitment (January 2022), you must be in the first four years (full‐time
equivalent research experience) of your research career and have not been
awarded a doctoral degree.

• You comply with the mobility rule, meaning that you must not have resided
or carried out your main activity (work, studies, etc.) in France for more
than 12 months in the 3 years immediately before the recruitment date
(January 2022).

Travel requirements:

You will be expected to work for 5 months at two other organizations in the
consortium as part of secondments: 2 months in the Netherlands at the
University of Delft (around Month 19 and 20 of the project) and 3 months in
Paris at Doctrine (around Month 26 to 28 of the project).

During the 36 months of your appointment, you will be expected to
participate to the ODECO project meetings hosted by the European partners
and conferences.

Prior education and experience:

The candidate must have a master's degree in law or a similar degree with
an academic level equivalent to the master's degree in law such as LLM or
JD.

Prior knowledge of Information Technology law is required.

Familiarity with public sector information, contract law, intellectual
property, open licensing and/or information technologies is 'nice to have'.

Language:

A good command of spoken and written English is required and a good reading
knowledge of French is highly desired.

Skills required:

Writing skills, ability to formulate/work on a scientific project

Ability to work in a team

Ability to work independently, organisational ability and ability to
account for one’s own actions

Ability to communicate, analyse and argue a case, summary and critical
evaluation

To apply, you should submit:

• A short cover letter explaining your personal motivation in pursuing a
PhD as part of ODECO, including how you see the PhD fitting into your
career trajectory

• A CV, which should include details of your eligibility (degree and
residency)

• Diploma

• Transcripts of records (bachelor and master)

• The master thesis with a one-page summary in English

• If available, another sample of writing, e.g., scientific publications,
professional or popular science writing

• English language certificate(s)

• 2–3 recent recommendation letters if you already have them, or the email
contact details and affiliation of 2-3 academic or professional references
we may contact.

Please submit your application package in one single PDF file entitled as
“Lastname_Odeco_Application.pdf”.

Applications need to be submitted online through the Euraxess 'application
button'. Only applications submitted through the portal can be considered.

Please note that incomplete applications will not be processed and that
your application cannot be considered if you don’t comply with the mobility
rules, in particular you must not have resided or carried out your main
activity (work, studies, etc.) in France for more than 12 months in the 3
years immediately before the recruitment date (January 2022).

Contact of both supervisors [email protected]

Closing date for application on the portal before August 30.

Selected candidates will be invited to an online interview scheduled
between September 06-24.

Results to be expected by September 30.

Administrative hiring process in October/November.
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