Job description
The doctoral researcher will use legal and historical methods to research the developing framing and governance of indigeneity in Sweden, Norway and Finland during the period 1920s–2020s. Particular emphasis will be placed on archival research and public investigations and documents, comparatively investigating the changing faces of Nordic settler state nationalisms and governance trajectories in relation to the indigenous Sámi people.
The doctoral researcher’s tasks include conducting research on the theme of the applicant’s dissertation and attending doctoral courses. The position may include up to approximately 80 hours/academic year of teaching and additional faculty-assigned duties. The position requires that the employee resides in Finland for the duration of the employment contract.
The doctoral researcher will work in close cooperation with the PI Daniela Alaattinoğlu and the rest of the MARCEN project team. The doctoral researcher will be co-supervised by the PI, who is a legal scholar, and Professor Patrik Lantto (University of Umeå), who is a historian. While the doctoral researcher will have the freedom to choose their own research focus, it is important that the thesis aligns with the description above and the focus of MARCEN.