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Last application date: Department: Degree: Occupancy rate: Vacancy type: ABOUT GHENT UNIVERSITYGhent UniversityGhent University is a top 100 university and one of the major universities in Belgium. Our 11 faculties offer a wide range of courses and conduct in-depth research within a wide range of scientific domains. Ghent University occupies a specific position among the Flemish universities. We are a socially committed and pluralistic university that is open to all students, regardless of their ideological, political, cultural, or social background. In its mission statement, Ghent University identifies itself as a socially committed university. This implies that the institution reflects about the positive impact that its activities can have upon society, and that it attempts to optimize that impact. It also implies the reflection about the potential negative impact of activities upon society, and the attempt of minimizing such impact. Over the course of its 200-year history, Ghent University has built up a strong scientific reputation. Ghent University invests both in fundamental, high-risk science as well as in applied research. The university is known for its scientific expertise in life sciences and medicine, materials and agricultural science, veterinary medicine, psychology, history, and many more. Faculty of Law and CriminologyThe Faculty provides academic teaching and services based on innovative scientific research. The education within these programmes is supported by the innovative scientific research performed within the 3 faculty departments encompassing all possible disciplines within the fields of law and criminological sciences. Human Rights CentreThe Human Rights Centre at the Faculty of Law and Criminology at Ghent University is an academic centre specialized in human rights law. Its members include senior experts as well as many young researchers, covering a broad research and teaching expertise, including international, regional, national, and comparative law of human rights. Human Rights Centre members work on a range of thematic issues, including legal pluralism, freedom of expression, gender, indigenous peoples’ rights, and the European Court of Human Rights. Members also actively engage with human rights practice by supervising clinical projects and submitting third-party interventions to the European Court of Human Rights. DiversityWe ensure equal opportunities, equal treatment, and equal access to the vacancies for all who apply. We ensure an objective and non-biased assessment procedure. Origin, ethnicity, gender, age, employment disability, sexual orientation, and other identity factors will not be a factor in assessing competences. Candidates who self-identify as belonging to vulnerable or minority groups are strongly encouraged to apply. Additional information:
YOUR TASKSWe are seeking to hire one fully funded PhD researcher as part of the ERC project: “Innovation and documentation. Reconstructing the paradigm of transitional justice from the ground up”. The PhD project focuses on initiatives documenting violations of IHRL and IHL in the Palestinian context. The ideal candidate has an interdisciplinary profile, covering at least social & legal studies related to human rights and transitional justice. They are open to using, or have experience with, various relevant empirical research methods (quantitative or qualitative) and have sound working knowledge of the context and the various topics studied as part of this research project. The researcher will be based at the Human Rights Centre at the Faculty of Law and Criminology of Ghent University. On-site presence is crucial given the highly collaborative nature of the project. Longer periods of empirical data collection in the Philippines are equally crucial. The selected candidate will be offered a position of limited duration as PhD researcher (12 months initially, with 36 months extension upon passing the first-year PhD requirements). We encourage candidates who self-identify as belonging to a minority group to apply, and our recruitment process is aimed at ensuring inclusion and diversity. Description of the broader research projectThe candidate will be part of a broader research project on the role of documentation in contemporary transitional justice processes – including ones developed in contexts where no peace agreement was signed or no political transition took place (like contexts of ongoing conflict). The context is one of settler colonialism, prolonged occupation, and genocide. In the Palestinian context, the absence of a political transition and the inadequacy of state-centered models of transitional justice has left the academic field of TJ to struggle with the Palestinian question. However, truth-telling and documentation initiatives have emerged as crucial practices to record international crimes, trace patterns of historical and ongoing violence, and expose international complicity. Palestinian grassroots initiatives and justice actors have traditionally played a central role in resisting the erasure of crimes and knowledge and preserving collective memory. In the context of genocide, documentation efforts acquire particular urgency. Documentation provides evidence for accountability while simultaneously advancing resistance against erasure and denialism. Palestinian documentation practices can be situated within transnational justice networks connecting local efforts to international actors. These networks adopt an ecosystemic approach, combining open-source intelligence, survivor testimony, oral history, and fictional narratives. The overall research project is a multi-disciplinary and multi-method study that seeks to theorize the role documentation processes play in the design of transitional justice initiatives. Documentation is crucial to almost every (institutional or grassroots) transitional justice initiative, but it is rarely the focus of transitional justice scholarship. The ambition is to move away from a pillar-based understanding of transitional justice and to consciously start from the practices of those most affected by various forms of violence to rethink transitional justice as an ecosystem in which documentation connects most initiatives. Overarching research question: A mixed-method actor-oriented approach will be used, requiring close collaboration between the new PhD researcher, other PhD researchers, and the three senior researchers already working on the project. Description of your specific researchThere is substantial room for PhD researchers to bring in their own topical and methodological expertise, provided their work centers on grassroots documentation efforts that can be meaningfully connected to the notion of transitional justice. The PhD researcher will take the lead on their selected case while working closely with one of the three senior researchers to ensure alignment with the overall agenda. The framework is defined, but fine-tuning research design, questions, methods, and deliverables is done collectively. The selected candidate will be supervised by Prof. Dr. Tine Destrooper and/or Dr. Brigitte Herremans, and collaborate with the Justice Visions team, the Human Rights Centre, and the Human Rights Research Network at UGent. Within the first year, the candidate will:
In following years, the candidate will:
WHAT WE ARE LOOKING FOREligibility:
Applicants will rank higher if they:
Additional expectations:
WHAT WE CAN OFFER YOU
INTERESTED?Submit all documents as one PDF via email: justicevisions@ugent.be before Mar 15, 2026 (23:59 CET) Required documents:
File naming: LASTNAME_FirstName_Palestine.pdf
Foreseen start date: Sept 1, 2026 Evaluation procedure
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