Beschreibung

DEPARTMENT: INTERNATIONAL LAW
CONTRACT: MAXIMUM DURATION CONTRACT: 01.09.26 – 31.08.2030
ACTIVITY RATE: 100%
STARTING DATE: 01.09.2026

Presentation of the Institute:
The Geneva Graduate Institute, founded in 1927, is a world-renowned centre of excellence for the study of international relations and development. Located in Geneva, Switzerland, the Institute offers a stimulating, multicultural and interdisciplinary academic environment. It offers masters and doctoral programmes, and conducts cutting-edge research on major global challenges.
The Geneva Graduate Institute is offering a four-year post-doctoral researcher position in the research project: “The Crisis of Consent. Consensualism in an Era of International Regulatory Agreements”.
Supervisor/Principal Investigator: Professor Fuad Zarbiyev
Project description: The Crisis of Consent: Consensualism in an Era of International Regulatory Agreements
A seasoned practitioner of international law once commented that states do not like their intention to undertake a particular commitment to be a surprise for them. But a careful observer of the life cycle of treaties would be tempted to paraphrase Michel Foucault’s famous statement about intentionality in power relations and point out that when undertaking treaty commitments, states ‘know what they do; they frequently know why they do what they do; but what they don’t know is what what they do does’. Indeed, international law is replete with examples of international legal commitments being expanded in practice in ways that could not have been contemplated by the states that undertook those commitments.
This state of affairs neatly illustrates the puzzle of consensualism in international law. On the one hand, it is widely recognized that state consent plays a foundational role in international law. On the other hand, there is limited understanding of what role consent plays in the actual operation of international law. Most existing accounts of consent are largely confined to the notion that states are not bound by international law without their consent. What it is that states are specifically bound by and whether and to what extent there is room for any ‘substantive consensualism’ constraining the determination of the content of their commitments remains severely undertheorized. In an era of international regulatory agreements and increasing judicialization of international affairs, this gap is not merely intellectual; it entails serious consequences, including the legitimacy deficit of international law, state resistance and uneven distributional consequences in a world of unequal resources. As a result, the existing accounts of consent face a twofold crisis: firstly, they cannot account for expansion of treaty commitments, and; secondly, they relegate ‘substantive consensualism’ to the backseat, supplying ammunition for pushback and backlash against international law.
The project aims to fill this significant research gap and initiate a new way of thinking about consent in international law. Its working assumption is that the intellectual matrix and the operating structures of international law governing treaties came into being long before important developments in treaty making, the rise of international regulatory agreements and independent third-party mechanisms. While classic treaties were merely transactions among chancelleries involving little more than state diplomatic machineries, most modern treaties are tools of global governance affecting numerous actors and allocating public goods and having third parties, rather than the parties to those treaties, as their exclusive or primary beneficiaries, placing significant strains on the traditional understanding of consent. Existing doctrinal accounts of consensualism also sit uneasily with independent compliance mechanisms, the latter typically having the upper hand in the competition for authority to determine the content of treaty commitments in a system in which impartial and independent statements of law are relatively rare and highly valued.
The alternative framework that the project seeks to offer aims to explain how treaty commitments are developed in practice while the ideological and rhetorical commitment to the principle of consensualism is kept intact. In particular, it attempts to identify patterns in the discursive expansion of international legal commitments by paying close attention to the main tropes, informal understandings and arrangements, discursive protocols, rules and constraints governing the administration of international legal commitments in the perception of international legal operators. The findings are expected to make significant contribution to the literature in international law and beyond, notably by supplying students and actors of global governance with analytical tools to better appreciate the power and limits of consensualism in international law and to design and communicate about treaty commitments more efficiently.

Key responsibilities:
Data collection (from public sources) and analysis in selected issue areas
Interviews and surveys with a selected group of current and former members of independent third parties, government representatives and counsel to governments
Assist with the organization of an introductory workshop and a conference
Assist with the preparation of an edited volume based on the proceedings of the conference
Publish at least one peer-reviewed article on the project’s findings
Participate in academic workshops and conferences relevant to the project’s theme and contribute to the public dissemination of the project

Requirements:
PhD in International Law with a solid background in public international law
Advanced writing and speaking skills in English and at least a passive knowledge of French
Familiarity with literature of both international law and international relations
Familiarity with empirical methods
Demonstrable knowledge of continent-wide and regional adjudication mechanisms in Africa

What you can expect from us:
Working with researchers from diverse background in an pioneer institution in the exploration of global issues
A flexible, considerate, inclusive and international working environment with a collaborative atmosphere

Application process
The interested candidates are invited to submit their application materials composed of a CV, a cover letter and a sample publication (if available) by 30 April 2026. A short list of candidates will be established by mid-May and the interviews with the shortlisted candidates will take place during the second half of May.
We are an equal opportunity employer and value diversity in our institution. We do not discriminate on the basis of age, marital status, disability status, race, national origin, color, gender, sexual orientation or religion.

Please note that offers received by post or direct email will not be considered.