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Last application date Aug 17, 2026 23:59
Department LW03 - Department of History
Degree Master in History
Occupancy rate 100%
Vacancy type Research staff
Ghent University is a world of its own. Employing 15.000 people, it is actively involved in education and research, management and administration, and technical and social services on a daily basis. It is one of the largest, most exciting employers in the area and offers great career opportunities. With each of its 11 faculties and more than 100 departments offering state-of-the-art study programmes that are grounded in research in a wide range of academic fields, Ghent University is a logical choice for its employees as well as its students.
You will conduct academic research in preparation of a doctoral dissertation. The dissertation fits in the research project ‘Language Struggle: National Movements in the Streets of Belgium, 1951–1993’.
Historians have established that Belgium’s national cleavage has generated far less collective action than either its ideological-religious or socio-economic cleavages. However, this view of relatively weak nationalist mobilisation is largely based on analyses of the period before 1950. In doing so, historians have often overlooked the years between the Royal Question and the Saint Michael’s Agreement, a period marked by several intense waves of nationalist agitation. Flemish, Walloon, Brussels Francophone, and Belgian nationalists took to the streets to advance their demands, and these mobilisations frequently resulted in confrontations. Both domestically and internationally, this agitation became known as the “language struggle,” although it encompassed much more than linguistic issues alone. It was only with the federalisation of the Belgian state that these conflicts gradually subsided.
To date, a comprehensive and systematic analysis of this “language struggle” remains lacking. The aim of this project is to address this gap. The researcher (doctoral scholarship holder) will systematically map nationalist agitation in post-war Belgium, focusing on aspects such as the spatial and temporal distribution of collective action, mobilisation strategies, underlying networks, interactions between different movements, and the repertoires of contention employed. Such a comprehensive analysis has only recently become feasible owing to the accessibility of newly available archives from the Belgian police services and the emergence of new techniques for the systematic processing of (digital) source corpora. These developments make it possible to compile a consistent dataset for the systematic study of nationalist agitation. Computational methods - such as GIS mapping, network analysis, and corpus linguistics - allow researchers to identify patterns and systemic trends that would remain invisible through traditional close reading alone.
Send your cv, copy of your diploma (if already in your possession), a motivation letter and a short research design (max. 1 page) to [email protected], by August 17 2026 at the latest. We do not accept late applications
As Ghent University maintains an equal opportunities and diversity policy, everyone is encouraged to apply for this position.
Ghent University is one of the top 100 universities in the Dutch language area, with more than 44,000 students and 15,000 staff members.
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