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03 PhD Degree-Fully Funded at University of Oslo, Norway

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University of Oslo, Norway invites online Application for number of  Fully Funded PhD Degree at various Departments. We are providing a list of Fully Funded PhD Programs available at University of Oslo, Norway.

Eligible candidate may Apply as soon as possible.

 

(01) PhD Degree – Fully Funded

PhD position summary/title: PhD Research Fellowships in Economics

A 2-4 PhD Research Fellow positions (SKO 1017) for the PhD programme are available at the Department of Economics:

The appointments are for a period of 4 years with 25% teaching and administrative duties. PhD Research Fellows will automatically be admitted to the Faculty of Social Sciences’ PhD programme and benefit from the Faculty’s organized research training.

The positions are not linked to specific topics or research projects. Applications from candidates in all fields of economics are encouraged, in particular in fields where the department has a strong research base and supervision capacity

Deadline : 15th January 2025

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(02) PhD Degree – Fully Funded

PhD position summary/title: PhD Research Fellowship in Political Science

We are offering a PhD position with a specialization in public policy and public administration research. This position is part of the EU-funded Horizon Europe Consortium “Sustainable Public Administration in Modern Democracies (SUPA),” which includes various research institutions across Europe and beyond. The analytical starting point of the SUPA Consortium is the observation that democratic governments often produce more policies than they can effectively implement. The key aims are (1) to identify strategies that make policy growth more sustainable and (2) to develop approaches that enhance the resilience of public administrations against the threat of overburdening. Within this broader consortium, the UiO team is specifically tasked with investigating how new policies generate additional implementation loads and examining the distribution of these burdens across various public authorities. The expectation is that public authorities will encounter different types of chances and challenges depending on how the new implementation tasks are spread or concentrated among them. The empirical focus of this Consortium centers on climate, environmental and social implementation authorities in six European countries (Denmark, France, Germany, Norway, Spain, and the Netherlands) and the European Union level. Additionally, UiO is the lead institution within the consortium, which means it is also tasked with coordination the individual members, crafting policy briefs, orchestrating workshops and webinars with policy-makers, administrators, and civil society actors, and organizing events with leading scholars.

Deadline : 4th February 2025

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View All Fully Funded PhD Positions Click Here

 

(03) PhD Degree – Fully Funded

PhD position summary/title: PhD fellowship

One PhD fellowship is available at the PROMENTA Research Center, Department of Psychology, University of Oslo. The PhD fellow will be working in the project Mental Health, Social Challenges, and Health Behaviors Among Sexual Minority Youth in Norway, funded by Stiftelsen DAM.

The project aims to gain comprehensive insights into the mental health, health behaviors, health services utilization, and social relationship factors among Norwegian sexual minority youth by using large-scale nationwide data, complemented by comprehensive data on youth in Oslo. The project is a collaboration between the PROMENTA Research Center and CENSE – the Norwegian Research Centre for Sexual Health. 

Deadline : 9th January 2025

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About The University of Oslo, Norway – Official Website

The University of Oslo, until 1939 named the Royal Frederick University is the oldest university in Norway, located in the Norwegian capital of Oslo. Until 1 January 2016 it was the largest Norwegian institution of higher education in terms of size, now surpassed only by the Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The Academic Ranking of World Universities has ranked it the 58th best university in the world and the third best in the Nordic countries. In 2015, the Times Higher Education World University Rankings ranked it the 135th best university in the world and the seventh best in the Nordics. While in its 2016, Top 200 Rankings of European universities, the Times Higher Education listed the University of Oslo at 63rd, making it the highest ranked Norwegian university.

The university has approximately 27,700 students and employs around 6,000 people. Its faculties include (Lutheran) theology (with the Lutheran Church of Norway having been Norway’s state church since 1536), law, medicine, humanities, mathematics, natural sciences, social sciences, dentistry, and education. The university’s original neoclassical campus is located in the centre of Oslo; it is currently occupied by the Faculty of Law. Most of the university’s other faculties are located at the newer Blindern campus in the suburban West End. The Faculty of Medicine is split between several university hospitals in the Oslo area. The university also includes some formally independent, affiliated institutes such as the Centre for International Climate and Environmental Research (CICERO), NKVTS and the Frisch Centre.

The university was founded in 1811 and was modeled after the University of Copenhagen and the recently established University of Berlin. It was originally named for King Frederick VI of Denmark and Norway, and received its current name in 1939. The university is informally also known as Universitetet (“the university”), having been the only university in Norway, until 1946 and was commonly termed “The Royal Frederick’s” (Det Kgl. Frederiks), before the name change.

The Nobel Peace Prize was awarded in the university’s Atrium, from 1947 to 1989 and will be so again in 2020, making it the only university in the world to be involved in awarding a Nobel Prize. Since 2003, the Abel Prize is awarded in the Atrium. Five researchers affiliated with the university have been Nobel laureates.

 

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