PhD position in Law, Technology and the Human body
Erasmus University Rotterdam School of Law, department Law & Markets, is looking for a fulltime PhD researcher in Law, technology and the human body (5 years with 20% teaching tasks).
Job description
The selected candidate will be embedded within the Law & Markets department, home of a vibrant and diverse academic community. The overarching mission of the Department Law & Markets is to develop and deliver cutting-edge, high-quality research and teaching on legal institutions shaping markets and their implications for socio-economic justice and sustainability. The research group specifically studies legal and societal problems generated in the complex dynamics of international, European and domestic laws regulating technology, trade, industry, investment, money, and more generally markets. The focus is on how to make the law in any form socially, environmentally and financially sustainable, how to deal with technological innovation on an inclusive basis and how to combine private and public interests responsibly. Researchers have different profiles, including law and technology, public law, international and EU law, legal theory, and commercial law. The Department is keen on multidisciplinary research.
PhD position: Law, technology and the human body.
The rapid advancement of bio- and data-driven technologies is reshaping the
relations between the law and the human body as a regulatory object. Legal
systems worldwide are struggling to address the legal and ethical implications
of the development and deployment of new technologies: from neurotechnology and
human enhancement to AI-driven medical interventions. Underlying most of these
developments is the increasing collection and processing of (health) data by
public and private actors, raising critical questions about the role of data
law and governance in fostering innovation while preventing societal and
individual harms.
This PhD position offers a unique opportunity to explore the intersection of
law and technology, examining how the law should understand and regulate
emerging technologies that interact with or affect the human body and the vast
data ecosystems that depend on it.
Deadline for application is 27 April 2025
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