Start Date
Immediate
Expiry Date
14 Mar, 25
Salary
0.0
Posted On
31 Jan, 25
Experience
0 year(s) or above
Remote Job
No
Telecommute
No
Sponsor Visa
No
Skills
Research Projects, Addition, Research Funding, Criminology, Swedish, Consideration, Machine Learning, Research, Natural Language Processing, Quantitative Research, Social Sciences
Industry
Education Management
The Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Helsinki invites applications for the position of
POSTDOCTORAL RESEARCHER or UNIVERSITY RESEARCHER - Core research area Criminal Policy
for a fixed term period for the duration of 3 to 5 years, starting in September 2025 or as agreed, but no later than January 1, 2026.
The position is located within the Criminal Policy Unit of the Institute of Criminology and Legal Policy. The Criminal Policy Unit conducts wide-ranging, multidisciplinary, and multimethod research on the criminal justice system and related phenomena. The unit’s research focuses on the evaluation and functioning of the criminal justice system and criminal policy measures as well as broader trends and transformations in criminal and control policy.
QUALIFICATIONS
The appointee must hold a doctoral degree in criminology, social sciences, law, computer sciences or another relevant field. Candidates in the final stages of completing their doctoral dissertation are also eligible to apply for the position but the doctoral degree must be completed by the beginning of the employment. The position requires the ability to conduct independent scientific research in a multidisciplinary environment, as well as demonstrate potential or experience in securing research funding and leading research projects. Applicants must have an excellent command of written and spoken Finnish and/or Swedish.
A strong methodological foundation in empirical quantitative research is considered as the core requirement. Demonstrated knowledge and experience in utilizing register data and computational methods (e.g. machine learning, natural language processing) in research being highly valued. Candidates should also have a good track record (taking career stage into consideration) of scientific publications and other research outputs. Knowledge of the Finnish criminal policy system and theory will also be considered an advantage. In addition, expertise in qualitative and mixed-methods research will be considered an asset.
In line with KRIMO’s national mandate, applicants will be assessed based on their empirical research skills and expertise in conducting quantitative research. The ability to produce research relevant to criminal policy is also essential (taking career stage into consideration). Relevant research areas for the role include, but are not limited to, the analysis of criminal behavior and victimization, sentencing practices, offender reintegration and recidivism, evaluating of criminal policy interventions and national criminal justice reforms, and examining the functioning of the criminal justice system from a policy perspective.
RESPONSIBILITIES
The appointee is expected to develop and sustain long-term research activities, both by advancing their own research agenda and contributing to the Institute’s statutory criminal policy research and Criminal Policy unit’s collaborative academic work. The appointee will be working in close cooperation with the Institute’s Information Systems Specialist. Depending on the final job description, the position may require a security clearance. The applicant is expected to provide a research plan and indicate areas of own research interest. They do not have to be ones that already now are part of institute’s research profile.
The appointee will also be involved in teaching activities, but due to the research orientation of the position in question the annual amount of working hours dedicated to teaching will be relatively low, only 5-10 % of the annual sum total.
Institute of Criminology and Legal Policy (KRIMO) is a research institute at the University of Helsinki, specialising in research and monitoring of crime and legal policy in Finland. As specified in the law on Institute of Criminology and Legal Policy (1139/2007), the tasks of the research institute are: