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Faculty: Faculty of Geosciences Your JobIn the Netherlands and other places around the world two challenges in planning converge in complicated ways. On the one hand, the so-called housing crisis of a shortage of good housing stock; and on the other hand, the climate crisis with far-reaching environmental consequences like changing water-levels. Translated into policy, both crises demand space and new spatial constellations, but are sometimes at odds with each other, such as when new houses are built in areas that are expected to bear the burden of climate change effects. How does this happen? What can we do differently? This PhD project starts from the question: How do planning techniques shape decisions around the governance of risk and development and the kinds of urban futures that become imaginable? In planning, climate risk is typically framed as a technical issue to be quantified and absorbed into evaluative procedures. Tools such as cost-benefit analysis (CBA) translate uncertain futures into calculable present values, making climate vulnerability administratively manageable. This PhD research project departs from the premise that techniques of valuation are not neutral instruments. They are socio-political devices through which global logics of valuation and risk are operationalized in local planning decisions. Their effectiveness lies in their banality: the taken-for-granted procedures through which planning bureaucracies organize the future. Valuation techniques like the CBA are sustained by "imagination infrastructures"—guidelines, standards, networks, and practices—that stabilize them as authoritative and common-sense. This PhD project interrogates their operation: how do these techniques and infrastructures preconfigure what can be imagined and negotiated in spatial planning? Tracing CBAs through global expert networks and national and local planning practices, the project seeks to unpack the "boring power" of planning techniques, and to imagine alternative imagination practices and infrastructures. The successful candidate will join an interdisciplinary research team at the Department of Human Geography and Spatial Planning and the Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development at Utrecht University. The team includes Dr Josje Bouwmeester, who works on urban planning negotiations, Dr Katinka Wijsman, working on politics of knowledge and valuation, and Dr Joost Vervoort, who works on transformative imagination. The project combines theoretical inquiry with empirical research into real-world planning negotiations and techniques. As a PhD candidate, you will:
Your QualitiesWe are looking for an enthusiastic candidate who:
Our OfferWe offer:
In addition to the terms of employment laid down in the CAO NU, Utrecht University also offers a range of its own schemes for employees. This includes arrangements for professional development, various types of leave, and options for sports and cultural activities. You can also tailor your employment conditions through our Terms of Employment Options Model. In this way, we encourage you to keep investing in your personal and professional development. For more information, please visit Working at Utrecht University. About UsA better future for everyone. This ambition motivates our scientists in executing their leading research and inspiring teaching. At Utrecht University, the various disciplines collaborate intensively towards major strategic themes. Our focus is on Dynamics of Youth, Institutions for Open Societies, Life Sciences, and Pathways to Sustainability. Sharing science, shaping tomorrow. Utrecht University’s Faculty of Geosciences studies the Earth: from the Earth’s core to its surface, including man’s spatial and material utilisation of the Earth—always with a focus on sustainability and innovation. With 3,400 students (BSc and MSc) and 720 staff, the faculty is a strong and challenging organisation. The Faculty of Geosciences is organised in four Departments:
More InformationFor more information about this position, please contact: Dr Josje Bouwmeester Email: j.a.bouwmeester@uu.nl Candidates for this vacancy will be recruited by Utrecht University. Apply NowAs Utrecht University, we want to be a home for everyone. We value staff with diverse backgrounds, perspectives and identities, including cultural, religious or ethnic background, gender, sexual orientation, disability or age. We strive to create a safe and inclusive environment in which everyone can flourish and contribute. Knowledge security screening can be part of the selection procedures of academic staff. We do this, among other things, to prevent the unwanted transfer of sensitive knowledge and technology. To apply, please upload via the "Apply Now" button:
For full consideration, submit your materials by 19 August 2026. Interviews are expected to take place in the week of 14 September 2026. Application deadline: 19 August 2026.
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