The position is suitable for the employment of people with severe disabilities. Severely disabled applicants will be given preference in the case of otherwise substantially equal suitability, qualifications and professional performance. The Munich School of Politics and Public Policy strives to increase the proportion of women. Applications from women are therefore expressly welcome.
Please send your application by May 18, 2025 at the latest.
I agree to the digital collection and processing of my data. I also agree that this data - taking into account the applicable data protection regulations - be used to fill vacancies. I accept that I may be contacted by employees by telephone and/or email/SMS to ensure that the application process runs smoothly. I confirm that I have provided all information truthfully. I am aware that false information can lead to dismissal even after a possible employment.
If this exciting position appeals to you and you would like to work for the Munich School of Politics and Public Policy, we look forward to receiving your informative application documents:
> over letter including information on potential dissertation projects (~2 pages)
> curriculum vitae
> academic certificates
> a writing sample (e.g. term paper, M.A. thesis, etc.)
The Munich School of Politics and Public Policy (HfP), with its affiliation to the Technical University of Munich (TUM), deals with the multifaceted interactions between politics, society, business and technology in research, teaching and practice. It was established by the Bavarian State Parliament on the basis of a separate law.
The Professorship Political Economy looks at the intersection of politics and the economy. It investigates how ideas and institutions as well as politics and power shape and are shaped by economic processes, focusing in particular on the causes and consequences of technological change. In doing so, it helps us understand how political and economic power, geopolitical and distributional conflict, or institutional legacies and influential ideas shape how and which technologies are developed and deployed - and how this in turn shapes societies and economies. Theoretically, it draws on and combines a variety of approaches, ranging from comparative, international, and European political economy to comparative politics and public policy, economic sociology, and international relations. Methodologically, it draws on and combines both quantitative and qualitative methods, with a particular focus on computational and multi-method approaches.