VACANCY: PhD scholarship: PhD Collective negotiations in sovereign default and corporate insolvency 1890-1920 [DEADLINE 15 APR 2026]
PhD scholarship:
PhD Collective negotiations in sovereign default
and corporate insolvency
Description
The Faculty of Law and Criminology, Department Interdisciplinary Study of Law (JURI), is looking for a PhD-student with a doctoral grant. More concretely your work package, for the preparation of a doctorate, contains:
Our team is looking for a doctoral
student (bursary position) for the project
‘Collective negotiations in sovereign default
and corporate insolvency (1890-1920)’.
At the end of the 19th and beginning of the 20th centuries, crises caused by defaulting states were discussed
in committees of bondholders. These committees
coordinated the negotiations and defended the interests of individual
bondholders.
The candidate will conduct research
in archives. Based
on an analysis of source
material, the strategies developed to reconcile the interests of multiple bondholders will be examined. Specific
attention will be paid to the dynamics
caused by voting rules and the autonomy
of representatives; in addition, the influence of developing
ideas about creditor meetings in bankruptcy law will be examined.
The project takes
the Belgian Association of Foreign Bondholders (1898) as a case study.
This association was part of the Antwerp
Stock Exchange. Its members had ties to the Antwerp business community, where merchant insolvencies were a
regular occurrence.
Insolvencies of private bondholders and companies could influence decisions
of the bond committee; deficient
bonds could be discussed in debt assessments of
insolvent traders. The project studies
the organisational characteristics of the bondholders' committee and the structure of negotiations and meetings, in comparison
to corporate insolvency.
This research offers points of reference for contemporary law and can form a basis for developing expertise
in insolvency law and/or international financial and economic
law.
For this function, our Brussels
Humanities, Sciences & Engineering Campus (Elsene) will
serve as your home base.
Profile
What do we expect from you?
You have a master's degree
in law or history (in which case,
with an interest
in political, institutional or economic history)
Good command
of English.
Knowledge of French
Ability to conduct research
both independently and as part of a team.
You
have not performed
any works in the execution of a mandate
as an assistant, paid from operating resources, over a total (cumulated)
period of more than 12 months.
The VUB wants to be a reflection of the society
where everyone's talent is valued,
regardless of gender,
age, religion, skin color, migration
background, disability and
neurodiversity.
Offer
Are you going to be our new colleague?
You’ll be offered a full-time
PhD-scholarship, for 12 months (extendable up to max. 48 months,
on condition of the positive
evaluation of the PhD activities), with planned starting date 01/05/2026.
You’ll receive a grant linked to one of the scales set by the government.
Apply, at the latest on 15/04/2026, via dave.de.ruysscher@vub.be, and attach the following documents:
your
CV;
your
motivation letter;
your diploma
(not applicable for VUB alumni).
Do you have questions about the job content? Contact
Dave De ruysscher
at dave.de.ruysscher@vub.be.
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