17 Fully-Funded PhD Jobs within the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) Doctoral Network
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17 Fully-Funded PhD Jobs within the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions (MSCA) Doctoral Network.
Lund University, in collaboration with a consortium of fourteen leading higher-education institutions from Europe and Canada, today announces the recruitment of 17 fully funded doctoral candidates for the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions Doctoral Network (MSCA DN) project titled Sociology of Authoritarian Law: Insights from Central Asia (SOCIAL).
This four-year doctoral training programme is scheduled to commence in September 2026 and aims to offer an interdisciplinary, international platform for doctoral research into law, governance, and society in authoritarian settings.
Project Rationale.
- Authoritarian governance presents complex challenges to established legal, institutional, and societal frameworks.
- This Doctoral Network addresses one of the most pressing research frontiers in socio-legal studies: how legal systems, normative orders, and governance structures evolve, adapt, and persist within authoritarian environments.
- With a geographic focus on Central Asia, the SOCIAL network will generate novel empirical and theoretical contributions concerning law-society–governance dynamics, while training a new generation of scholars capable of bridging academic research and policy practice.
Consortium and Institutional Framework
- The SOCIAL network is coordinated by the Department of Sociology of Law at Lund University and includes 14 partner organisations across Sweden, the United Kingdom, Germany, the Netherlands, Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania, Switzerland, Turkey, and Canada.
- The participating institutions represent world-class centres in law, sociology, political science, and related fields.
- Together, they commit to offering doctoral candidates a structured programme of research training, international mobility, inter-sectoral secondments, and joint supervision.
The SOCIAL Doctoral Network pursues three primary objectives:
- Empirical and theoretical innovation – to advance knowledge about how authoritarian legal orders function, adapt, and interact with global legal norms and frameworks.
- Interdisciplinary doctoral training – to develop scholars equipped with advanced research methods and transferable skills, able to operate across disciplinary boundaries.
- Policy outreach and knowledge transfer – to ensure that research outcomes are translated into actionable intelligence for governance, civil society, and international stakeholders.
Training Model and Candidate Responsibilities
Each of the 17 doctoral candidates will be hosted by one of the consortium institutions and work under the joint supervision of at least two scholars from different partner institutions.
The training model includes:
- Two mandated secondments (one academic, one non-academic) of between two and six months each.
- Fieldwork and research activities in Central Asia as an integral component of each project.
- A comprehensive training curriculum covering research methods, ethics, Open Science practices, transferable skills, and thematic seminars on law, governance, and corruption.
- Mobility and collaboration across consortium institutions, international conferences, network workshops, and peer-reviewed publication opportunities.
Applicants must satisfy the following criteria, in accordance with MSCA conditions:
- Possess a Master’s degree (or equivalent) entitling them to commence doctoral studies in the country of recruitment.
- Have not been awarded a doctoral degree at the time of recruitment.
- Have a maximum of four years’ full-time equivalent research experience after their Master’s degree by the recruitment date.
- Must not have resided or undertaken their principal activity (work, studies, etc.) in the host country for more than 12 months during the 36 months immediately before recruitment (MSCA mobility rule).
- Demonstrate strong command of English; hold a relevant disciplinary background (law, sociology, political science, economics, development studies, anthropology, human rights, or related fields); show motivation for interdisciplinary research and fieldwork in Central Asia.
Employment and Benefits
- Successful candidates will be appointed under a full-time, fixed-term employment contract (typically 36 months) funded through the MSCA programme.
- The contract provides a competitive monthly living allowance, mobility allowance, and, where applicable, family allowance, in line with MSCA regulations.
- Candidates will benefit from full social security coverage, access to the international consortium network, structured training, and career development support.
Doctoral Project Descriptions
A BROAD OVERVIEW OF THE DOCTORAL PROJECTS IS PROVIDED BELOW:
PHD POSITION DETAILS.
DC1 – Authoritarian Legal Harmonization
Host:
- Södertörn University (Sweden)
Focus:
- Explore how international frameworks shape legal harmonization in authoritarian regimes.
Description:
- This DC project investigates how legal norms are diffused and harmonized across authoritarian regimes in Central Asia.
- It focuses on the growing influence of regional organizations like the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), Eurasian Economic Union (EAEC), and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) in shaping legal convergence through non-democratic pathways.
- The doctoral candidate will explore how these regional actors challenge Western liberal-democratic legal norms, contributing to a contested and evolving legal landscape in the region.
- The project aims to highlight the tensions between authoritarian legal models and Western governance agendas.
Application details and procedures can be found here: https://www.sh.se/english/sodertorn-university/meet-sodertorn-university/this-is-sodertorn-university/vacant-positions.
DC2 – Myths vs Realities in Legal Reforms
Host:
- University of Birmingham (UK)
Focus:
- Contrast public reform narratives with actual legal outcomes under authoritarian elites.
Description:
- This DC project examines the contradictory nature of legal reforms in Central Asia.
- Some reforms aim to entrench authoritarian rule through constitutional engineering, while others introduce mechanisms aligned with international standards, such as administrative courts and accountability structures.
- The PhD candidate will analyze these dual-track reforms, assessing how they are perceived by citizens, how they are enforced by institutions, and evaluating their implications for governance and rule of law.
Application details and procedures can be found here: https://edzz.fa.em3.oraclecloud.com/hcmUI/CandidateExperience/en/sites/CX_6001/job/8258/?utm_medium=jobshare&utm_source=External+Job+Share
DC3 – Corporate Transparency & Corruption
Host:
- University of Toronto (Canada)
Focus:
- Link corporate disclosure norms to patterns of grand corruption.
Description:
- This DC project explores the relationship between corporate disclosure, transparency, and grand corruption in Central Asia.
- It examines how legal frameworks and institutional practices shape corporate accountability, and how transparency norms are interpreted or subverted under authoritarian governance.
- The research will generate a comparative database and case studies, analyzing how companies and regulators navigate disclosure obligations in environments marked by systemic corruption.
Application details and procedures can be found here (please click on “Doctoral student opportunity”): https://www.crimsl.utoronto.ca/people/directories/all-faculty/matthew-light
DC4 – Politics of Anti-Corruption
Host:
- Turiba University (Latvia)
Focus:
- Examine local adoption and manipulation of international anti-corruption standards.
Description:
- This DC project investigates how international anti-corruption frameworks are interpreted and applied in Central Asia’s authoritarian legal systems.
- The research will unpack how global norms rooted in Western legal traditions are adapted, contested, or resisted by domestic institutions shaped by collectivist values and legal nihilism.
- The doctoral candidate will engage in fieldwork examining the implementation and local meaning of anti-corruption practices and agencies.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
DC5 – Corruption in Public Procurement
Host:
- Marmara University (Turkey)
Focus:
- Identify informal procurement practices in national and donor-funded contracts.
Description:
- Focusing on corruption in public procurement processes in Central Asia, this DC project investigates the gaps and tensions between national and international compliance cultures.
- It will analyze how informal practices intersect with official procurement policies, particularly those tied to international financial institutions.
- The candidate will study case examples, including pandemic-related procurement, to identify vulnerabilities and policy reform opportunities.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
DC6 – Executive By-Laws & Authoritarian Governance in Central Asia.
Host:
- Lund University (Sweden)
Focus:
- Analyze how decrees and bylaws centralize authoritarian power.
Description:
- This DC project explores how by-laws and normative acts, often beyond the scope of parliamentary oversight, are used in authoritarian regimes to regulate public life.
- The research will investigate legal fragmentation, governance mechanisms, and informal hierarchies within Central Asia’s legal systems.
Application details and procedures can be found here: https://lu.varbi.com/en/what:job/jobID:870095/
DC7 – Traditional Courts & State Law.
Host:
- Leibniz-Zentrum Moderner Orient (Germany)
Focus:
- Study interactions between aksakal and formal court systems.
Description:
- This DC project examines the interaction between traditional courts (e.g., aksakal) and state legal systems in Central Asia, past or present.
- The project will assess the political use of jurisdictional pluralism and explore how informal justice mechanisms operate in contested or hybrid legal environments.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
DC8 – Political Connections & Access to Economic Resources.
Host:
- University of the West of England (UK)
Focus:
- Trace how networks and corruption influence access to scarce economic resources.
Description:
- Investigating how corruption and political networks influence access to scarce economic resources (e.g., bank credit) in authoritarian economies, this DC project will use fieldwork and survey methods to analyze stakeholder experiences, institutional practices, and the fairness and efficiency of resource allocation in key economic sectors.
Application details and procedures can be found here: Doctoral Researcher https://ce0164li.webitrent.com/ce0164li_webrecruitment/wrd/run/ETREC179GF.open?WVID=8433573cTb&VACANCY_ID=617852YCi3
DC9 – Administrative Law & Regime Legitimacy.
Host:
- Malmö University (Sweden)
Focus:
- Investigate administrative law reforms as instruments of authoritarian legitimacy.
Description:
- This DC project studies administrative law reform as a mechanism of authoritarian legitimation.
- It will examine the role of legal frameworks, judicial practices, and institutional cultures in shaping public perceptions of legal accountability and legitimacy in Central Asia.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
DC10 – Anti-Money Laundering Compliance in Authoritarian States
Host:
- Estonian Business School (Estonia)
Focus:
- Assess anti‑money‑laundering frameworks and enforcement pathways.
Description:
- This DC project focuses on anti-money laundering (AML) frameworks in Central Asia.
- It will evaluate compliance mechanisms, enforcement levels, and the alignment of AML norms with international expectations in environments marked by political centralization and opacity.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
https://info.ebs.ee/hubfs/EBS%20Project%20based%20PhD%20Call%20Deadline%2031.01.26.pdf?hsLang=en
DC11 – Security Narratives & Legal Change
Host:
- University of Birmingham (UK)
Focus:
- Study how securitization drives constitutional/legal reforms.
Description:
- This DC project explores how security discourses such as counterterrorism and digital surveillance drive constitutional and legal reforms in authoritarian regimes.
- The research will study how the law is instrumentalized to expand executive power and suppress dissent.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
DC12 – “Outside the Law” Legal Mobilization in Central Asia
Host:
- Lund University (Sweden)
Focus:
- Examine how civil society actors use non-state means to claim rights and justice.
Description:
- This DC project analyzes how individuals and communities mobilize for rights and justice through non-state and extra-institutional channels.
- It will focus on local activism, digital advocacy, and informal justice initiatives in authoritarian contexts
Application details and procedures can be found here: https://lu.varbi.com/en/what:job/jobID:869875/
DC13 – LEGAL PLURALISM & ANTI-CORRUPTION
Host:
- University of Groningen (Netherlands)
Focus:
- Understand dynamics across plural legal systems in corruption control.
Description:
- This DC project investigates how actors navigate competing legal systems to combat corruption in Central Asia.
- The project will assess whether legal pluralism enhances or obstructs anti-corruption effectiveness in hybrid governance settings.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
DC14 – LEGAL NIHILISM & DISTRUST
Host:
- Charles University Prague (Czechia)
Focus:
- Probe causes and consequences of societal mistrust in formal law.
Description:
- This DC project examines why legal nihilism persists in post-socialist authoritarian societies.
- It will explore public perceptions of law, informal legal practices, and how legal mistrust affects social order and compliance.
Application details and procedures can be found here: https://euraxess.ec.europa.eu/jobs/386400
DC16 – RURAL GOVERNANCE IN CENTRAL ASIA.
Host:
- University of Zurich (Switzerland)
Focus:
- Explore local democracy, governance, and rural political cultures.
Description:
- This DC project will explore local governance practices and democratization from a bottom-up perspective in Kazakhstan.
- It will use ethnographic fieldwork to investigate how villagers engage with and resist formal political structures.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
DC17 – GOVERNANCE IN MONGOLIA
Host:
- University of Zurich (Switzerland)
Focus:
- Study post‑socialist local political transformations in Mongolia.
Description:
- This DC project investigates local democratic practices in Mongolia, focusing on evolving governance models in rural and peri-urban areas.
- It will study civic participation, traditional authority, and institutional adaptation.
Application details and procedures can be found here:
WHO SHOULD APPLY?
- Hold a Master’s in law, political science, economics, development studies, sociology, human rights, anthropology, or related fields
- Hold no PhD at recruitment
- MSCA mobility rule applies: unspent 12 months in host country during previous 36 months
- Have strong research and language (English) abilities, and motivation to engage in interdisciplinary research and policy outreach
APPLICATION PROCEDURE.
Applicants should consult the relevant recruitment link for each doctoral position to obtain full instructions. Generally, a complete application comprises:
- A cover letter explaining motivation and fit with the project;
- A research proposal (recommended 2–3 pages) aligned with the thematic project description;
- Curriculum vitae detailing academic and employment history;
- Degree certificates and academic transcripts;
- Two academic referees with full contact information;
- A writing sample (e.g., a published article, Master’s thesis chapter, working paper).
- All documents are to be submitted as a single PDF file via the host institution’s online portal by the deadline of 31 January 2026.
