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PhD Position: Colonial Environmental History (19th Century Dutch East Indies)

Research / Academic
Utrecht

Join our team historians as a PhD researcher with a project on the role of the environment in Dutch colonial projects in 19th century Indonesia.

Your job
As a PhD candidate, you will be working on a project titled “Conservation before conservationism: Resilient environments in Dutch East Indies in the 19th century” funded by the PhD Programme Faculty of Humanities. This project explores the introduction and development of the system of plantation and enforced labour – known as the Cultivation System – on the island of Java under Dutch rule between 1830 and 1870. You are expected to compare environments that were transformed by such system and environments that resisted to it, and identify key factors able to explain the differentiated output. The overarching goal of the project is to look at local-imperial dynamics and find out strategies that determined the non-transformation of Indonesian nature.

You will:

  • conduct research within the period of appointment in the Netherlands as well as at archives and libraries in Indonesia;
  • complete the dissertation within the period of appointment;
  • be encouraged to publish at least one peer-reviewed journal article and/or book chapter;
  • publish peer reviewed journal articles and book chapters;
  • help with the organisation of workshops;
  • participate in project meetings and closely collaborate with the other members of the research team;
  • collaborate with environmental and colonial history within and outside UU;
  • present research findings at national and international workshops and conferences;
  • collaborate with societal partners.


The project will be supervised by Assistant Professors Roberta Biasillo and Roel Frakking with co-supervision by Professors Ido de Haan and Liesbeth van de Grift. You will be associated with the UU Strategic Theme Pathways to Sustainability and you will contribute to the Cultural Heritage and Identity of the Sector Plan. There will be an assessment at the end of the first year, on the basis of which it is decided to give an extension for another three years.

Requirements:

General qualifications:

  • You hold a Master’s degree in a relevant field (e.g. nineteenth-century Dutch history, environmental history, environmental studies, imperial history, the history of Southeast Asia, etc.) at the time of appointment.
  • You have a good command of spoken and written English.
  • You have a good command of written Dutch.
  • You are flexible to travel for this position.
  • You are able to work independently and in a team, be innovative and creative.
  • It is considered an asset if you have an interest in developing language skills in Bahasa Indonesia or if you already have a basic/good command of written Bahasa Indonesia.

Salary Benefits:

We offer:

  • a position for four years;
  • a working week of 38 hours and a gross monthly salary between €2,770 and €3,539 in the case of full-time employment (salary scale P under the Collective Labour Agreement for Dutch Universities (CAO NU));
  • 8% holiday pay and 8.3% year-end bonus;
  • a pension scheme, partially paid parental leave and flexible terms of employment based on the CAO NU.


In addition to the terms of employment laid down in the CAO NU, Utrecht University has a number of schemes and facilities of its own for employees. This includes schemes facilitating professional development, leave schemes and schemes for sports and cultural activities, as well as discounts on software and other IT products. We also offer access to additional employee benefits through our Terms of Employment Options Model. In this way, we encourage our employees to continue to invest in their growth. For more information, please visit Working at Utrecht University.

Work Hours:

36 - 40 hours per week

Address:

Drift 6