university of oslo | Scholarship for Nigerians and Africans - Part 3

Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Marine Microalgal Physiology for International Students, University of Oslo, Norway

The CEES is a centre of excellence for integrative biological research and is well-funded. It provides a stimulating research environment, situated at the Department of Biology, with many young international and Norwegian scientists working on a variety of theoretical and empirical topics within ecology, evolution, population genetics, genomics, phylogenetics, molecular biology, and statistical methodology. The CEES is chaired by Nils Chr. Stenseth and currently employs 20 faculty members, 40 postdocs/researchers, 35 PhD students and 36 MSc students. Information about the centre can be found at:

The fellowship period is 3 years and starting date 1 January, 2011.

Job Description:

The position is funded by the Norwegian Research Council as part of a project that investigates climatic adaptation and long-term evolution in marine phytoplankton. This research project will study the adaptive response of marine calcifying algae (coccolithophores) to climatic change within a cross-disciplinary framework of fossil time series data, controlled culture experiments and evolutionary modeling. Bridging the fields of geology and biology, this research will study coccolithophore size variability in light of physiology, ecology and evolutionary theory. The post-doctoral fellow will use laboratory culture experiments to compile a comprehensive data set of physiological responses (growth rate, calcification rate and cell/coccolith size) of living coccolithophore species to changing environmental conditions (e.g. pH, nutrient availability). The planned short-term growth experiments will inform hypotheses regarding phenotypic plasticity in single genotypes. If it can be established within modern species whether the degree of morphological variation is an accurate measure of genetic variation, rather than phenotypic plasticity, then we can extrapolate this to the fossil record and test evolutionary models of genetic variation over longer timescales. Ideally, this project will go one step further and also assess the effects of climatic adaptation by monitoring several lines of coccolithophores over longer incubation times (months to years) comparing ambient and future climatic scenarios (e.g. high pCO2, low pH, high temperature, low nutrients).

Requirements:

The successful candidate must have a Doctors degree or equivalent in Biology (or other relevant field within Biological or Earth Sciences and Environment), preferably with speciality in marine botany or phycology. Extensive experience in biological laboratory methods, experimental work and microscopy is required. Experience in algal culturing (coccolithophores or other phytoplankton), marine biological fieldwork and/or biological oceanography or limnology will strengthen the application. Dissemination of the research through publications and presentations are important parts of this position. The successful applicant will also have to take part in administrative work connected to the project. Good writing skills and some experience with project management are thus desired.

A good command of English is required.

The application must include:

  • Application letter including a statement of interest, summarizing the applicant’s scientific work and interests and describing how she/he fits the description of the person we seek
  • CV (summarizing education, positions, pedagogical experience, administrative experience and other qualifying activity), including a list of published and unpublished works
  • Copies of educational certificates, transcript of records, letters of recommendation
  • A complete list of publications and up to 5 academic work that applicant wishes to be considered by the evaluation committee
  • Names and contact details of 2-3 references (name, relation to candidate, e-mail and telephone number)

Foreign applicants are advised to attach an explanation of their University’s grading system. Please remember that all documents should be in English or a Scandinavian language.

Closing date for applications: 1 September 2010

Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Criminology / Sociology of Law, University of Oslo, Norway

The main purpose of the postdoctoral research fellowships is to qualify researchers for higher academic positions. The fellowship period is 4 years and within the position is assigned a teaching component of 25 %. It is required that the appointed candidate takes courses to be granted certification of basic teaching skills at a university level within the 4 year period.

Applicants must hold a degree equivalent to a Norwegian PhD/doctoral degree. Candidates who have submitted their doctoral thesis for an evaluation at a Norwegian research institution before the closing date for the application may also apply. For candidates writing their doctorate at a foreign research institution, the doctoral thesis must be completed and approved within five months after the closing date. The doctoral thesis as well as letter of confirmation from the research institution must be submitted together with the application.

The applicant shall submit a project proposal for the planned research. This proposal shall include a plan for the progress of the research. The applicant is expected to be able to complete the project during the period of appointment. In ranking the applicants, emphasis will be on originality of thought, diversity of perspectives and an analytical approach. Quality and originality rather than quantity will be emphasised.

Applicants are requested to submit a complete overview of their education, former positions and other relevant experience, a complete publication list and up to five scholarly publications. The submitted publications must be in English or in a Scandinavian language unless otherwise specifically agreed upon.

Personal suitability and co-operation skills will receive special attention in the selection process.  Short listed applicants may be invited for an interview at the University of Oslo.

Applicants must within the closing date submit four copies of:

  • A letter of application
  • A research proposal, maximum 10 pages
  • A CV ( a complete overview of the applicants’s education, former positions and other relevant experience)
  • Copies of certificates, diplomas and recommendations (in English or Scandinavian, or with certified translations into English). Foreign applicants are advised to attach an explanation of their university’s grading system.
  • Up to five scholarly publications. If the submitted publications are co-authored, the division of work between the authors must be confirmed in the form of a co-author statement.

Contact :
The Head of the Department, Professor Kristian Andenæs, tel. (+47) 22 85 01 05, kristian.andenas@jus.uio.no, or
the Head of the Administration Turid Eikvam, tel. (+47) 22 85 01 45, turid.eikvam@jus.uio.no.

Closing date: September 1st 2010

PhD Research Fellowship in Network and Distributed Systems for International Students, Norway

The Department of Informatics (IFI) is one of nine departments belonging to the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences at the University of Oslo. IFI is Norway’s largest university department for general education and research in Computer Science and related topics. You can read more about the Department here:. The Department has near 800 students on bachelor level, near 300 master students, and over 200 PhD students. The totall staff of the Department is close to 250 employees, about 150 of these are full time scientific positions: about 60 Professors and Associate Professors.

The fellowship is for a period of up to 3 years.

Job Description:

The scholarship is in the framework of the Tidal News (Middleware Platform for Adaptive and Dependable Data Dissemination) project.

We are witnessing a dramatic increase in the use of data-centric distributed systems such as the dynamic Web, sensor networks, network-monitoring systems, and various publish-subscribe systems. The ubiquitous presence of such systems creates very large application networks that spread over large geographical areas and diverse intra- and inter-organizational domains. The visions of massive demand-driven data dissemination, intensive processing, and intelligent fusion in order to build dynamic knowledge bases that seemed infeasible just a few years ago are about to come true.

However, the realization of this potential demands adequate support from middleware that could be used to deploy and support such systems. At this time, both COTS middleware software and even state-of-art research middleware lack the technological foundations to cope with the enormous volume of data, constantly changing underlying network connectivity, and dynamic system organization. Typically, numerous information transmitters produce continuous data flows as well as massive unpredictable bursts of data at geographically dispersed locations. This data needs to be rapidly processed, routed, and classified by the degree of criticality, and intelligently fused. A large number of potentially mobile clients can issue multiple concurrent queries of varying urgency, priority, and precision requirements. In order to build a system that is capable of handling such a demanding situation, there is a clear need to develop new middleware technologies for scalable, mobility, adaptive, and reliable handling of these high-volume dynamic information flows.

We are seeking a student who is interested in designing, developing, and evaluating techniques that address these issues.

Requirements:

Applicants must have a degree in Computer Science, or in a related study, with excellent results. They must also be able to demonstrate interest in scientific research. The ideal candidate for the position will have strong background in distributed computing.

The purpose of the fellowship is research training leading to the successful completion of a PhD degree.

The fellowship requires admission to the research training programme at the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences. An approved plan for the research training, including a project outline, must be submitted no later than two months after taking up the position, and the admission must be approved within three months. For further information see:

A good command of English is required of all students attending the University of Oslo.

The application must include:

  • Application letter
  • Project description
  • CV (summarizing education, positions and academic work – scientific publications),
  • Copies of transcripts of records, and educational certificates
  • List of publications and academic work that the applicant swishes to be considered by the evaluation committee
  • Names and contact details of 2-3 references (name, relation to candidate, e-mail and telephone number

Foreign applicants are advised to attach an explanation of their University’s grading system.

Please remember that all documents should be in English or a Scandinavian language.

Closing date for applications: September 17, 2010