Are you holding Master’s degree and ready to elevate your academic journey to the highest level? University of Amsterdam, Netherlands, has announced a multiple fully funded PhD positions awaiting talented individuals like you. Don’t miss your chance to be part of our vibrant academic community. Explore the exciting PhD positions available and submit your application today!”
Candidates interested in fully funded PhD positions can check the details and may apply as soon as possible.
(01) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position in Quantum Materials under Extreme Conditions
Are you a highly motivated MSc graduate in physics with a strong affinity for quantum and condensed-matter physics experiments? The Optics of Quantum Materials (OQM) group is seeking an excellent and ambitious PhD candidate to perform fundamental research on quantum materials using state-of-the-art optical spectroscopy.
Quantum materials encompass an enormous library of materials with novel electronic and magnetic properties that are expected to become relevant in a variety of energy saving applications or quantum technologies. Optical spectroscopy provides key insight in the dynamics underlying these properties. The OQM group is developing several new techniques to explore quantum materials under extreme conditions such as extreme high temperatures, large magnetic fields or on nanometer length scales
Deadline : 4 Oct 2024
(02) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:– PhD Position in Wellbeing Economy Research
Do you like/are you looking for a challenging job in a dynamic setting? The department GPIO of the faculty Social and Behavioural Sciences is looking for a PhD candidate.
Are you exceptionally interested in doing academic research, and specifically in the field of wellbeing economy and citizens’ science? Do you want to work transdisciplinary, in collaboration with locally embedded residents and professionals? Is it your ambition to become a top-tier researcher? We are seeking a PhD candidate for the Amsterdam Wellbeing Economy research project, which is funded jointly by the Municipality of Amsterdam and the University of Amsterdam. The PhD track is part of the Governance and Inclusive Development (GID) programme group.At the GPIO department, research and education focus on spatial-social relations (both within and between the North and South), on urban aspects and on the social, economic and environmental aspects of development and sustainability. The GID programme group is one of four research groups within the GPIO department. At GID, research critically analyses and rethinks dominant development paradigms, and engages with international, national and local development practices, policies and debates to identify viable and socially just alternatives. The Amsterdam Wellbeing Economy Research project is dedicated to interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary research framed around a rigorous approach to measure wellbeing bottom-up. The project collects and analyses grassroot-validated data to offer a broader insight than economic indicators or top-down framing of wellbeing issues. The ultimate aim is to bridge a scientific evidence-based approach with local community platforms in 3-5 neighborhoods, collecting and analysing data as a concrete input into effective policy and social participation.
Deadline : 15 September 2024
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(03) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:– PhD: An Intervention for Non-suicidal Self-injury and Depression through a Culturally-sensitive Chat
Dutch-Turkish and Dutch-Moroccan communities are the largest communities with a non-Western background in the Netherlands. These communities face a pressing mental health issue: depression hits them more frequently (15.1% for first generation and 13.0% for second generation; for third generation, numbers are unknown) than the native Dutch population (8.2%). Also, relapses are common among this population (25.4% to 27.9%). This inequality is a critical public health concern, particularly because depressive symptoms can lead to a cascade of adverse outcomes, such as NSSI, a behaviour associated with significant distress and elevated suicide rates. Further, Turkish or Moroccan migrants infrequently seek professional help or engage in secondary prevention (i.e., prevention of the worsening of symptoms and relapses) for their mental health problems in part due to stigma/taboo, low mental health literacy, mistrust, privacy concerns, negative attitudes, and low intentions.
This project aims to develop a personalized culturally-sensitive chatbot-based intervention that allows three generations of Dutch-Moroccan and Dutch-Turkish migrants with depression and/or NSSI to engage in secondary prevention.
Deadline : 30 August 2024
(04) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD MediaMinds – Computational Mechanisms of Social Media Use in Youth
We have an urgent need to better understand the social media engagement of youth. Social media supports the specific developmental needs of youth, such as those for social connection. However, the increased sensitivity of the developing brain to social rewards may place youth especially at risk of compulsive use. In addition, youth’s sensitivity to social influence exposes another potential vulnerability, given that not all information is trustworthy. In this project we will focus on novel computational models to capture the complex interactions between developing motivational and cognitive processes, and specific social media affordances. We will take a multi-method approach relying on social media trace data, experience sampling, the development of novel ecologically valid experimental tasks, and neuroimaging.
Deadline : 23 September 2024
(05) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position in Social/Cultural Psychology: Gendered Emotion Expression Across Cultures
Are you enthusiastic about advancing our understanding of how culture and gender intersect in shaping the communication of emotion? Are you excited by the idea of conducting conceptually and methodologically groundbreaking social science together with a team of experts in gender, culture, and emotion research? Are you interested in learning and employing innovative scientific methods that include big data, cross-national studies, and experience sampling?We are seeking a PhD candidate for a 4-year project on gendered emotion expressions across cultures. This PhD track is embedded in the Social Psychology programme group, consisting of a vibrant group of world-renowned researchers studying culture, emotion, and intergroup relations. The desired starting date is January 1st, 2025, with some room for negotiation.
Deadline : 24 September 2024
(06) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD in Adaptive and AI-based Reliability Techniques for Complex IoT-based Systems
The rapid expansion of the Internet of Things (IoT) has led us into the era of smart interconnected heterogeneous devices, advancing fields such as smart cities, healthcare etc. However, this growth has introduced complex challenges in maintaining reliability and resilience across diverse IoT systems. These systems, characterized by their heterogeneous components and dynamic environments, need advanced solutions to address reliability threats that impact their resilience, performance, and longevity.
The theme of this research is to ensure efficient and reliable services for IoT systems composed of unreliable heterogeneous components operated by battery. The focus is on developing novel techniques across hardware and software layers to ensure reliable and efficient design of heterogenous and distributed IoT platforms.
This includes leveraging adaptive AI for cross-layer reliability modeling and optimization and exploiting machine learning to create self-aware solutions for the above problems. By utilizing predictive modeling, machine learning, and adaptive optimization techniques, this research seeks to provide a holistic approach that ensures sustained performance and reliability over time, addressing the inherent unpredictability and variability in IoT environments.
Deadline : 15 October 2024
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(07) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–Three PhD Students for a New Project on a Global Constitution
The PhD positions will focus on innovative and interdisciplinary original research within the disciplines of environmental studies, social and political sciences, international law and the governance of new technologies. The project focuses on designing a Global Constitution. It is based on four methods: the theory on the rule of law and constitutionalism, empirical evidence of what is included in national constitutions, analysis of the new elements that need to be included in a Global Constitution (e.g. global environmental problems; governance of new technologies – block chain, AI, bio-tech; challenges in private and public international law and open science (invitation to actors worldwide to write an essay on what they see is important in a Constitution and become contributing authors). You will be part of this exercise and have expertise in governing new technologies, public private law, or the theory behind constitutionalism, global justice and rule of law. This is a once in a lifetime opportunity to work on a very ambitious and innovative global project.
Deadline : 20 September 2024
(08) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Project: Value-Creation with Marginalized Stakeholders
This PhD project will advance knowledge on firms’ inclusion and exclusion of marginalized stakeholders, guided by the overarching research question: ‘What is stakeholder marginalization, and when and how do firms engage marginalized stakeholders in value-creation?’ Marginalized stakeholders are stakeholders that are to some degree invisible to managers due to low physical, social, and/or psychological proximity, and that have limited opportunity to decide whether and how to participate in firm-led activities. Such stakeholders are, for example, stakeholders who are subject to negative externalities, are associated with vulnerable social identities, belong to lower social classes, or are stigmatized due to their physical disabilities, mental health conditions, or sexual orientations. While scholars have suggested that engaging with marginalized stakeholders may enable firms to identify new opportunities for sustainable value-creation and social innovation, little is currently known about how firms deal with the inherent challenges of achieving this.
Deadline : 30 september 2024
(09) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position Artificial Intelligence: Power Asymmetries and Data Justice
Are you looking for a challenging position in a dynamic setting? The Amsterdam School for Cultural Analysis (ASCA) currently has a vacant PhD position as part of the Artificial Intelligence: Power Asymmetries and Data Justice project led by principal investigators Dr Lonneke van der Velden and Dr Claudio Celis Bueno. ASCA is one of the five Research Schools within the Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR).
ASCA is a research community devoted to the comparative and interdisciplinary study of culture (in all its forms and expressions) from a broad humanities perspective. ASCA is home to more than 120 scholars and 160 PhD candidates and is a world-leading international research school in Cultural Analysis. ASCA members share a commitment to working in an interdisciplinary framework and to maintaining a close connection with contemporary cultural and political debates.
Deadline : 8 september 2024
(10) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position in the Political Economy of Housing, Financial Policy and Climate Adaptation
We are looking for a PhD-candidate to be part of the new project Just adapt: The political economy of housing climate adaption, led by dr. Jens van ’t Klooster and dr. Cody Hochstenbach. The project will be interdisciplinary, being embedded in both the Department of Political Science and the Department of Geography, Planning and International Development Studies.
The physical impact of climate change cuts across almost every social and institutional domain. One key domain is the field of housing. The housing sector is exposed to huge financial risk due to rotting foundations, extreme weather, and floods. Financial valuation practices for residential real estate fail to take these potential losses into account, setting the stage for misallocated resources and billions in climate-related damages. Everywhere, key stakeholders in housing policy and the financial system are positioning themselves to determine who will pay the price for damage to housing from climate change.
Deadline : 6 September 2024
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(11) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position in Code-Based Cryptography
Are you fascinated by the theoretical underpinnings of security that allow for protecting privacy in an ever more interconnected world? Are you willing to take on the challenge of upgrading cryptography to deal with the threat posed by quantum computation? Do you enjoy working in a team of young and motivated researchers? We are seeking a PhD student to carry out cutting-edge research in theoretical computer science, with an expected focus on code-based cryptography.
Cryptography’s task is to provide tools for maintaining the privacy and integrity of digital data. Unfortunately, almost all currently deployed public-key cryptography is known to be vulnerable if an attacker has access to a quantum computer. Given the near-term deployment of quantum computing technologies, the time to deploy post-quantum secure cryptography is now.
Code-based cryptography not only offers plausible security against quantum attacks; it also leads to practically efficient implementations of powerful cryptography such as secure multiparty computation and (non-)interactive proofs. However, our theory of its security is severely wanting. Firstly, unlike its close cousin of lattice-based cryptography, we lack a satisfactory theory of security reductions. Secondly, many recent proposals lack sufficient cryptanalysis. The aim of this PhD project is to fill in these holes and thereby offer a better foundation for the security of code-based cryptography.
Deadline : 16 September 2024
(12) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position Unraveling the Complexity of Suicidal Behavior
Are you passionate about utilizing cutting-edge computational methods to enhance our understanding of mental health? Do you have a strong interest in clinical psychology and aspire to develop innovative solutions for suicide prevention? We are seeking a highly motivated PhD candidate to join our project titled: “Understanding the Dynamics of Suicide: An Agent-Based Modeling Approach to Inform Intervention Strategies in an Urban Context.”
In this project, we aim to employ computational modeling to gain deeper insights into the transition from suicidal ideation to actual suicidal behavior. This collaborative initiative leverages the expertise of the Department of Clinical Psychology, the Department of Psychological Methods, and the Department of Computer Science. You will be based in the Department of Clinical Psychology, a supportive and stimulating academic environment in the heart of Amsterdam. The supervision team includes Dr. Derek de Beurs, Dr. Valeria Krzhizhanovskaya, Prof. Merel Kindt, and Prof. Denny Borsboom.
Deadline : 31 August 2024
(13) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position in Architectural History and Heritage Studies
Are you looking for a challenging position in a dynamic setting? The Amsterdam School for Heritage, Memory and Material Culture (AHM) currently has a vacant fully funded PhD position as part of ‘Concrete Colonialism: Architecture and Heritage in Indonesia around Independence’, led by principal investigators and daily advisors dr. Rixt Woudstra and dr. David Duindam, and prof. dr. Esther Peeren as supervisor. This project is funded by a Starters Grant awarded by the Faculty of Humanities. The AHM is one of the five Research Schools within the Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR).
AHM, as a thematic research school, fosters a dynamic, interdisciplinary and transnational approach across various disciplines. AHM’s mission and profile integrate all branches of research that focus on the material and intangible remains of the past, the reciprocal relations between objects, meanings and representations, and the dynamics of memory. AHM’s research is carried out from diverse theoretical and methodological perspectives: in concept-oriented, object-oriented and user-oriented approaches.
Deadline : 15-10-2024
(14) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position: Nanophotonic Metasurfaces for “Designer” Building-integrated PV Panels
Are you a highly motivated physicist with a strong interest in nanotechnology and photovoltaics? The 2D Nanophotonics group within the Institute of Physics is seeking an ambitious PhD candidate to perform fundamental research at the interface of nanophotonics and photovoltaic material physics for the project High-efficiency metasurfaces for “designer” building-integrated PV.
Integrating large-scale photovoltaics (PV) in densely populated areas poses an urgent need to integrate PV with existing buildings and infrastructure. However, large-scale building-integrated PV (BIPV) hinges on social acceptance, which is strongly improved if the visual appearance of the PV panels matches that of the surrounding structures. Optical coatings that alter the visual appearance provide a unique opportunity to manipulate the reflected spectrum of a solar panel using reflective filters or luminescent coatings. Initial demonstrations prove promising, but are typically inefficient, provide only partial colouring, or exhibit a strong angle-dependence.
Deadline : 30 September 2024
(15) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD-position Aspects of Inclusive Language in French
Are you looking for a challenging position in a dynamic setting? The Amsterdam Center for Language and Communication (ACLC) currently has a vacant PhD position as part of the Starting Grant ‘Inclusive language in French: challenges for L2-education?’, led by principal investigator Dr. T.J.T. (Thom) Westveer. The ACLC is one of the five Research Schools within the Amsterdam Institute for Humanities Research (AIHR).
The ACLC prioritises diversity (taken in a holistic sense, e.g., ethnicity, social and/or linguistic background, gender, sexuality) and is committed to creating an inclusive research environment. The vision of the ACLC is to solve scientific and societal problems in the broad field of language and communication through a focus on variability in language and the causes and constraints thereon.
To realise the vision, researchers in the ACLC investigate language within its cognitive, communicative and physiological contexts, and with due regard for the diversity of languages and modalities. An integrative and inclusive ethos guides the investigation, inviting collaboration across different and competing paradigms and methods.
Deadline : 2 September 2024
(16) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–Two PhD Positions in ERC Starting Grant Project on Multiple Jobholders
Project 1: Dire straits
This project will research precarious forms of moonlighting in seven advanced economies (Denmark, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, the United Kingdom and the United States).
The PhD researcher will start with a literature review on precarious forms of multiple jobholding, and integrate labour law analysis and policy analysis in the initial sections of his or her dissertation. The empirical articles will be based on analyses of the large-scale, international survey data and will investigate the measurement and classification of precarious forms of multiple jobholding, the quality of work among multiple jobholders, their characteristics, and the relation with their contexts. Research questions include: who are the multiple holders combining ‘bad jobs’? And how static or dynamic are dimensions of quality and total worker wellbeing across time? The final empirical article will be based on analyses of dynamic app data and analyses the stability or dynamics of the quality and total worker wellbeing among precarious multiple jobholders.
Supervisors: Dr. Wieteke Conen (AIAS-HSI/ UvA), Prof. dr. Maarten Keune (AIAS-HSI/ UvA)
Project 2: Career pathways
This project will research transitions, career development and wellbeing of multiple jobholders in seven advanced economies (Denmark, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Poland, the United Kingdom and the United States).
The PhD researcher will start with a literature review on human capital accumulation and skills diversification among multiple jobholders, and integrate policy analysis in the initial sections of his or her dissertation. The empirical articles will be based on analyses of the large-scale, international survey data on getting to a classification of quality of work and wellbeing among multiple jobholders and the influence of meso-level factors on prevalence, quality and wellbeing. Research questions include: how do industries, competition and organisations affect workers’ behaviour to start working multiple jobs? How do organisations enhance or deteriorate the quality of work and wellbeing of multiple jobholders? Under what conditions do multiple jobholders develop skills that can be transferred between jobs? How does human capital accumulation in one or more of the jobs affect later working life? The final empirical article will be based on analyses of the dynamic app data and analyses the embeddedness of multiple jobholding.
Deadline : 22.09.2024
(17) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position on Linguistic Representation of Gender in Translated Children’s Literature
Children’s literature plays a crucial role in shaping societal values and cultural norms. Stories serve as a significant means through which beliefs about sociocultural phenomena, such as gender are formed in children. The project Tales and Tongues across Time: A Linguistic Exploration of a Century of Gender Representation in Children’s Books in the Netherlands aims to explore how gender representation in the language of children’s books has evolved over the past century (1925-2025) in the Netherlands. This study will analyze original Dutch books and translations from English and Scandinavian languages, focusing on linguistic elements like pronouns, nouns, adjectives, and verbs to understand changes in gender portrayal over time and and in the process of translation and transcreation. Applying distant reading methods, the research aims to uncover how societal values reflected in language evolve and impact cultural norms.
As a PhD candidate, you will engage in the Tales and Tongues across Time project. You will have the freedom to apply your own interpretation of the research topic. You compile your own corpus and design your own studies within the scope of the project. A more extensive description of the research project is available upon request.
Deadline : 20-09-2024
(18) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Candidate in Nanomaterials: Developing Luminescent Nanocrystal Layers for Spectral Shaping
The Aim of your project is to develop fluorescent nanocrystal layers for spectral shaping, to enhance photosynthetic efficiency. Recent nanoscience breakthroughs allow the synthesis of fluorescent semiconductor nanocrystals with near-unity quantum yield, offering great opportunities as spectral shapers to convert the solar spectrum to the needs of agricultural crops and algae. At the same time, substantial knowledge is available on the effect of (artificial) lighting on the growth of algae. In this project, we combine both worlds and develop light-shaping nanocrystal foils with possible photonic outcoupling to investigate their potential for algal yield enhancement. The research will be carried out in an inspiring interdisciplinary collaboration, in the nanocrystal and optics labs of Prof. P. Schall at UvA, and Algae Parc at Wageningen University.
You will develop and synthesize highly efficient semiconductor nanocrystals with the desired absorption/emission spectrum, especially recent lead-halide perovskites and related 2D perovskite nanocrystals, and evaluate their optical performance. The nanocrystals will be embedded into optically characterised polymer layers, optimised for best performance. One possible route is to design an outcoupling structure, through modelling and fabrication, to extract the light that is internally trapped in the layers. To achieve the desired light spectrum, a combination of NCs will be employed to convert UV/blue light (350-460 nm) to yellow and red (560-680 nm), which are considered the most effectively used by microalgae for photochemical conversion. The combination of different emitters with partially overlapping spectra requires consideration of their energy transfer, ensuring efficient light absorption and emission. Furthermore, since overheating is a common problem for algal cultivation, including IR-blocking nanoparticles can be explored to protect the culture from this part of the solar spectrum.
Deadline : 31 August 2024
(19) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD in Stochastics and Optimization
This PhD research initiative aims to develop queueing models to model waiting time to healthcare services in developing countries, and then develop optimization methods to solve the final nonlinear optimization model. Moreover, it could be the case that discrete-event simulation is needed to calculate the waiting time. One of the options could be to use Machine Learning for Model Learning. Moreover, the aim is to combine the facility location problem with the capacity problem (queueing models). More precisely, you will develop an optimization method to optimize both the number and locations of the facilities, and the capacities, such that the overall time to treatment (travel time + waiting time) is minimized and the costs are less than the available budget. Our partnerships with many NGO’s provide us with access to pertinent data for this research. Visits to healthcare services in one or more of the developing countries are possible, but are not compulsory.
Deadline : 1 November 2024
(20) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Eco-evolutionary Dynamics in the Infant Microbiome
In humans, gut and oral microbiota develop rapidly during early life and are essential for our health during infancy and later in life. Many factors impact this development, including delivery modes and physical contact with family members, but also various ecological and evolutionary processes that act within the infants.
Recent genomic advances now enable strain-level characterization of the microbiome, paving the way for a deeper understanding of how host-associated microbial communities develop over time, ultimately aiming to predict efficient interventions to improve human health outcomes. Exciting questions include, for example, which microorganisms are transmitted from mothers to newborns, and do their strains persist during infant development? How do early life experiences impact the microbiome? Does within-infant microbiome evolution shape microbial communities, and does this vary with age and across body sites? Do Archaea, microbial symbionts parasitizing other microbes, and microbial viruses play a role in health and disease?
Deadline :1 September 2024
(21) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD Position on Optical Atomic Clocks
You will work on two projects. You and the QDNL team will design and build a highly reliable optical lattice clock, based on our AQuRA project. With our partners from VSL and VU, we will distribute the frequency reference of this clock through fibre links across the Netherlands and ultimately Europe. In parallel, you and the QDNL team will create continuously operating optical clocks (a superradiant clock and a zero-deadtime, multi-ensemble clock). Such a clock should ultimately be able to average down to a precision of 10^-18 in minutes instead of the hours needed by todays clocks. This benefit will unlock new possibilities from fundamental science to society.
Deadline : 31 March 2025
(22) Fully Funded PhD Position
PhD position summary/title:–PhD in Computational Prediction of Nanoplastic Impact on Protein Function
Do you enjoy working on interdisciplinary research at the crossroads of physics, chemistry, biology and computational science? Are you interested in using simulations and artificial intelligence to understand key molecular processes for human and planetary health? The Van ‘t Hoff Institute for Molecular Sciences (HIMS) and the Informatics Institute (IvI) are looking for an ambitious PhD student to develop and apply an automated computational framework for the prediction of nanoplastic impact on protein function. This research will be part of the Computational Soft Matter Lab.
At the molecular level, complex physicochemical processes can be understood in terms of free-energy landscapes, which map metastable states and pathways onto key system descriptors. These surfaces can be explored via advanced simulations; exploiting machine learning and data mining to find optimal descriptors and boost the sampling of functional dynamics. Most importantly, in silico we can predict changes in the shape of these landscapes, identifying valleys and channels sculpted by internal or external factors. You will work on predicting nanoplastic-induced changes to a protein’s free-energy landscape—i.e., structure and function—and collaborate with various computational and experimental groups to confirm your predictions.
Deadline : 13.09.2024
About University of Amsterdam, Netherlands –Official Website
The University of Amsterdam is a public research university located in Amsterdam, Netherlands. The UvA is one of two large, publicly funded research universities in the city, the other being the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam (VU). Established in 1632 by municipal authorities and later renamed for the city of Amsterdam, the University of Amsterdam is the third-oldest university in the Netherlands. It is one of the largest research universities in Europe with 31,186 students, 4,794 staff, 1,340 PhD students and an annual budget of €600 million. It is the largest university in the Netherlands by enrollment. The main campus is located in central Amsterdam, with a few faculties located in adjacent boroughs. The university is organised into seven faculties: Humanities, Social and Behavioural Sciences, Economics and Business, Science, Law, Medicine, Dentistry.
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