The Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology unites scientists in the natural sciences and humanities to investigate the history of humankind from an interdisciplinary perspective, with the help of comparative analyses of genes, cultures, cognitive abilities, languages and social systems of past and present human populations as well as those of primates closely related to human beings.
Dr Heidi Colleran is seeking qualified applicants for a fully-funded two-year postdoctoral project on “The Evolutionary Dynamics of Multilingualism”. This postdoctoral project is the core modelling component in the multi-sited ERC-funded project “Multilingual worlds – neglected histories. Uncovering their emergence, continuity and loss in past and present societies” (MULTILING-HIST), led by Principal Investigator Prof Justyna Olko at the University of Warsaw https://culturalcontinuity.al.uw.edu.pl/projects/multilingual-worlds-neglected-histories-uncovering-their-emergence-continuity-and-loss-in-past-and-present-societies-multiling-hist/.
The position is based at the Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Anthropology in Leipzig, in the BirthRites Lise Meitner Research Group, hosted by the Department of Human Behavior, Ecology and Culture.
The MULTILING-HIST project explores multi-level dimensions of historical and contemporary multilingualism: (1) the presence of multilingualism in local and regional settings; (2) the characteristics and dynamics of such multilingual settings, in other words, societal multilingualism. The fundamental aim of the project is to reconstruct, explain and better understand the mechanisms and causality of the processes behind the emergence, continuity, reduction and loss (as well as possible re-emergence) of multilingualism in differing historical, geographical, social, political and cultural contexts. The project studies historical and contemporary multilingual milieux from four regions relevant for understanding the causal structure of multilingual trajectories: Central-Eastern Europe, Mesoamerica, South Africa and the Archipelago of Vanuatu. The case studies also offer a novel possibility to study the ‘invisibility’ of multilingualism and uncover its neglected history(ies). A multidisciplinary approach combines historical and present-day data, qualitative, quantitative and experimental methods, as well as mathematical and simulation modeling, data-driven mapping and GIS based analyses.
Suitable candidates trained in computer science, computational (social) science, or any relevant discipline involving micro-or macro-simulation are strongly encouraged to apply. Candidates interested in transitioning to industry following the position are also welcome.
Essential
Desirable
Aims:
The aim of this project is to develop generative simulation models of the dynamics of historical and / or contemporary multilingualism, informed by historical and present-day data as well as informal models from published literatures in linguistics, anthropology and other humanities and social science fields.
Project tasks include:
The candidate will be a core member of an international research team focused on the MULTILING-HIST project aims, and will participate in the broader activities of the group (including travel to joint meetings). In addition to their individual research, the candidate will have opportunities at MPI-EVA to develop collaborative projects in the BirthRites Lise Meitner Research Group led by Dr Heidi Colleran, and to interact with world-class researchers in the fields of human behavior, cultural evolution, computational social science and anthropology.
Funding:
The postdoctoral candidate will be fully funded by the MULTILING-HIST project. Salaries are determined according to the German public service pay scale (TVöD).
Applications should include:
All electronic applications received by December 20th 2024 will be considered. Current PhD students finishing in 2024 are also encouraged to apply. Since our timeline is fixed, the start date is ideally beginning of 2025.
Please apply online via our online application system (link via the job ad on our career website). Only complete submissions via this link will be taken into consideration. Deadline for applications is 20 December, 2024.
The Max Planck Society is committed to equal opportunities and to employing individuals with disabilities and explicitly encourages them to apply. Additionally, the Max Planck Society wishes to increase the proportion of women in areas in which they are underrepresented; women are therefore explicitly encouraged to apply. Finally, we wish to encourage researchers from underrepresented countries in the Global South, as well as from any other underrepresented demographic, to apply.
Further information on the institute is available at http://www.eva.mpg.de/. Information on the BirthRites research group is available at https://www.eva.mpg.de/birthrites/.
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