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The University of Oulu is a multidisciplinary, international research university, with about 3,600 employees who produce new knowledge based on high-standards research and provide research based education to build a more sustainable, smarter, and more humane world. The University of Oulu community has about 17,000 people in total. Our northern scientific community operates globally and creates conditions for the emergence of innovations.
We are now looking for a
to join the University of Oulu’s Faculty of Humanities, Unit of History, Culture and Communications). The Postdoctoral Researcher will be based in the project “Archiving the Planet: Material Infrastructures and Ecologies of Storage in the High North” (https://www.oulu.fi/en/projects/archiving-planet-material-infrastructures-and-ecologies-storage-high-north-seeds), funded by the University's Eudaimonia Focus Institute. The project studies past and present infrastructures and agricultural practices in the circumpolar North. It takes cultural perspectives on the role of Northern regions in local and global landscape and agricultural practices in the context of the ongoing environmental crisis that involves the concerns of sustainability, climate change and biodiversity. The project is situated within environmental humanities and the disciplines of anthropology, archaeology, history, and heritage studies, and is led by Professor Vesa-Pekka Herva at the University of Oulu. The length of this postdoctoral position is fixed term for 30 months and cannot be extended beyond June 2026.
This project benefits from an affiliation to the Biodiverse Anthropocenes programme. Biodiverse Anthropocenes is a Research Programme of the University of Oulu supported by the Academy of Finland PROFI6 funding (2021-2026). This innovative and transdisciplinary research initiative brings together scholars from across the social and natural sciences to collaboratively investigate the biodiversity loss currently threatening multi-species well-being and planetary sustainability, and to generate future-oriented solutions both in the Arctic and around the planet. The postdoctoral researcher will be encouraged to become a core member of Biodiverse Anthropocenes and take part in the programme’s exciting calendar of interdisciplinary activities and events.
Located on the coast of the Gulf of Bothnia in Northern Finland with 13,900 students and 3,800 employees, the University of Oulu is one of the Nordic countries’ largest universities and a global leader in studies of Arctic environments and peoples. The research unit of History, Culture and Communications combines cutting-edge expertise of archaeology, cultural anthropology, information studies, history, and the history of science and ideas.
You will become part of a transdisciplinary project that investigates questions around seeds, plants, agricultural practices and imaginaries, and infrastructures of agriculture in relation to circumpolar regions. This project investigates the extent to which the circumpolar and high North are becoming a new frontier for world agriculture, facilitated via the melting of permafrost and recent initiatives for preserving collections of the planet’s seeds specimen for future generations. Made up of a group of leading archaeologists, historians, and anthropologists, the project investigates the “social lives” of seeds, through analysis of contemporary and historical data (across e.g. museums, archives, doomsday vaults, and biological seed laboratories). It also considers the long-term fluctuations of agricultural practices in the circumpolar North and how material-genetic stores shape infrastructures of conservation, the socio-cultural construction of nature, and the production of global knowledge across institutions and disciplines.
For this position we are looking to recruit a talented and highly motivated research-oriented person interested in the relationships between past, present and future entanglements of agriculture and the circumpolar North. More specifically, we welcome research ambitions that engage with practices, knowledges and/or imaginaries of human-plant-animal-landscape relationships in the North. The focus of the specific postdoctoral project is open, but some examples of possible themes could be:
You are welcome to propose any research topic of relevance to the intersection of plant cultivation and its landscapes in the context of the circumpolar/high North in connection to the broader themes of sustainability, climate change, and the Anthropocene. Northern agricultural histories and futures have become increasingly topical in the context of changing climate, biodiversity loss, and resource exploitation in the Arctic. Prof. Herva and the team have engaged with human-environmental relations in the northern world extensively and from multiple perspectives and the postdoctoral researcher will benefit from the team’s experience and contact networks, as well as from the Biodiverse Anthropocenes programme, and you will have a unique opportunity to produce original work within a new and dynamically growing research area. You are encouraged to take a transdisciplinary approach across, between and beyond different disciplines.
As the core postdoctoral researcher on this team, you will both carry out your own proposed research project and will also support Prof Herva in delivering the broader goals of the SEEDARC project. Primary duties attached to the position will thus include:
Supportive and transparent research environment in which your work is valued and your contribution is recognized;
A world-class research environment in a multinational, high ranking research group working to solve globally significant scientific and environmental challenges;
A lively community of committed scholars in an innovative and internationally focused programme keen on generating new research ideas;
You will be supported to lead-author academic papers, and you will be encouraged to attend and present at key academic conferences (funding dependent);
In order to succeed in and enjoy the position, we would expect from you:
We also appreciate:
A transdisciplinary research orientation, with work anchored in multiple approaches from across the social, natural sciences and/or humanities;
Capacity to collaborate in research and research dissemination activities;
Proficiency in Finnish or a Scandinavian language is an advantage, but not a requirement.
The position is fixed-term for 30 months beginning on 1.1.2024 or as soon as possible thereafter and ending on 30.06.2026.
The salary will be based on the levels 5-6 of the demand level chart for teaching and research staff of Finnish universities. In addition, a salary component based on personal work performance will be paid (maximum of 50 % of the job-specific component). Starting gross salary will be approx. 3600-4200 € per month (before taxes).
A trial period of 6 months is applied in the position.
Interested? If yes, please apply by Friday 24th November 2023 (23:59 Finnish local time) through our recruitment system.
The application should be written in English and include the following:
The eligible applicants fitting best in the profile expected for the position will be invited to an on-site or remote interview. All applicants will be notified during the selection process.
We welcome applicants from all backgrounds, including people of different ages, genders and members of different language, cultural or minority groups.
If you have any further questions about this position or the SEEDARC project, please contact Prof. Vesa-Pekka Herva, Faculty of Humanities, vesa-pekka.herva@oulu.fi.
Edited 10.11.2023: application deadline extended from 8.11.2023 to 24.11.2023
Type of employment | Temporary position over 6 months |
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Contract type | Full time |
Number of positions | 1 |
Full-time equivalent | 100% |
City | Oulu |
County | Pohjois-Pohjanmaa |
Country | Finland |
Reference number | 2023/480 |
Contact |
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Published | 09.Oct.2023 |
Last application date | 24.Nov.2023 |