PhD candidate (SKO1017) in the project “Epidemic traces”, in social anthropology to be based at the Department of Social Anthropology

We invite applications for a three-to-four-year position as PhD candidate (SKO1017) in social anthropology to be based at the Department of Social Anthropology, starting in the beginning of the 2022-23 academic year. The candidate will independently develop and conduct a PhD research project in Kenya, examining how vaccination practices, institutions and infrastructures, as they have been deployed over time, shape present and future social, material, and political relations, including the conditions of health and its governance. This will form part of the broader project “Epidemic Traces. Remains of infectious disease control in Africa” (EpiTraces), which investigates how epidemic and anti-epidemic measures durably alter bodies, ecologies, landscapes, infrastructures, kinship and activism in various African sites.

For more information on this project, click: Epidemic Traces – Department of Social Anthropology (uio.no)

The candidate should have a very recent master’s degree in social or cultural anthropology or a related discipline, and demonstrate an ability to think across humanities disciplines, combining ethnographic and historical methods with aspects of STS, material culture studies, archaeology and/or heritage studies, to examine how the past – as memory, and the materiality of bodies, circulations and habits, archives, technologies and infrastructure – continues to act in the present.Foto: Colourbox

Job description

We invite applications for a 36-months position as PhD (SKO1017) in social anthropology, to be based at the Department of Social Anthropology, University of Oslo. For the right candidate an additional 12 month of teaching duty will be considered.

The PhD project will be part of the work-package “Infrastructures of vaccination and the logistics of immunity in Kenya”, and will have Noémi Tousignant (University College London, UK) as external co-supervisor. This work-package investigates the mutual shaping of epidemics and immunization over time, looking at the dynamic relations among human and non-human epidemic outbreaks, prevention and anticipation, vaccination technologies and infrastructures, individual and collective immunities, and broader health systems among others.  Vaccination is intended to elicit durable biological traces – via antibody formation – in individuals and groups, as a tool rather than a collateral effect of disease control. The expansion of vaccination coverage has played an important role in building up African healthcare infrastructures from the late-colonial and early post-independence decades. Vaccination’s intentional remains include collective immunity, the absence of outbreaks, alive children, dense versatile health infrastructures, or trust in the state; but its plans and practices can also generate gaps, scars, failures, fragile relations, vulnerabilities and incapacity.

Proposed PhD projects should combine ethnographic with archival, material studies and/or oral historical methods. Among the themes that can, but need not, be explored by the project are: *tensions and interactions among the temporalities (routine, emergency, cyclical, eventful) of epidemics and of immunization; *how past immunization policies and ideologies (associated with, for example, colonial disease control, socialist healthcare, or decentralization) condition the infrastructures available for future ones; *and how present outbreaks of “vaccine-preventable diseases” are (re)interpreted as failures of vaccination and immunity, or as opportunities to wield and demonstrate the power of vaccines, antibodies and government.

Qualification requirements

  • Applicants must hold a Master’s degree of equivalent (120 ECTS) in social or cultural anthropology; degrees in related disciplines (e.g. STS, sociology or geography) can be considered if previous work was anthropologically informed, and intellectual engagement with literature in these neighbouring fields would certainly be an advantage. The Master’s degree must include a thesis of at least 30 ECTS, with a minimum grade on the thesis of B (ECTS grading scale).
  • Fluent oral and written communication skills in English are a requirement; knowledge of Kiswahili and or willingness to learn it would be considered an advantage.
  • In assessing the applications, emphasis will be placed on the project description, as well as the applicant’s academic and personal prerequisites to carry out the project. A good match between the candidate’s proposal and the project’s planned activities and the specific requirements for the researcher position is a main selection criterion, along with the quality of the proposal and the qualifications of the candidate.

We offer

  • salary NOK 491 200 – 534 400 per annum depending on qualifications in a position as PhD Research fellow, position code 1017.
  • attractive welfare benefits and a generous pension agreement, in addition to Oslo’s family-friendly environment with its rich opportunities for culture and outdoor activities

How to apply

The application must include

  • cover letter (statement of motivation and research interest, 1-2 pages)
  • Project description, including research questions, theoretical framing and progress plan (max. 4 pages, excluding references).
  • CV (including a complete list of education with grades, positions, pedagogical and administrative experience, publications and other qualifying activities)
  • Copies of educational certificates (academic transcripts only)
  • A complete list of publications (if applicable). A sample of writing that illustrate the applicant’s research and communication ability
  • List of reference persons: 2-3 references (name, relation to candidate, e-mail and phone number)

The application with attachments must be delivered in our electronic recruiting system, please follow the link “apply for this job”. Foreign applicants are advised to attach an explanation of their University’s grading system. Please note that all documents should be in English (or a Scandinavian language).

The best-qualified candidates will be invited to interviews.

The successful applicant might be offered an option of up to 12 months of teaching duty (in addition to the 36 months).

It is expected that the successful candidate will be able to complete the project in the course of the period of employment.

Formal regulations

Please see the guidelines and regulations for appointments to Research Fellowships at the University of Oslo.

No one can be appointed for more than one PhD Research Fellowship period at the University of Oslo.

According to the Norwegian Freedom of Information Act (Offentleglova) information about the applicant may be included in the public applicant list, also in cases where the applicant has requested non-disclosure.

The appointment may be shortened/given a more limited scope within the framework of the applicable guidelines on account of any previous employment in academic positions.

The University of Oslo has an agreement for all employees, aiming to secure rights to research results etc.

Inclusion and diversity are a strength. The University of Oslo has a personnel policy objective of achieving a balanced gender composition. We also want to have employees with diverse expertise, combinations of subjects, life experience and perspectives. We will make adjustments for employees who require this. 

If there are qualified applicants with special needs, gaps in their CVs or immigrant backgrounds, we will invite at least one applicant in each of these groups to an interview.

Contact information

Interested applicants are encouraged to contact project leaders and co-supervisors to discuss possible themes and case-studies:

  • Professor Wenzel Geissler – p.w.geissler@sai.uio.no
  • Associate Professor – r.j.prince@medisin.uio.no
  • Dr. Noemi Tousignant – n.tousignant@ucl.ac.uk

About the University of Oslo 

The University of Oslo is Norway’s oldest and highest ranked educational and research institution, with 28 000 students and 7000 employees. With its broad range of academic disciplines and internationally recognised research communities, UiO is an important contributor to society.

The Department of Social Anthropology The Department of Social Anthropology was founded in 1964 and is today a highly ranked anthropology department. Our researchers study society and culture through extensive, ethnographic fieldwork. The Department of Social Anthropology educates students at bachelor’s-, master’s and ph. d.-level.

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