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BreaktheBias project seeks to address one of the most challenging problems of international human rights law - the issue of unequal access to human rights justice. Everyone is said to have a right to have their claim heard in court and receive redress. But the reality at international level does not appear to reflect this. Of all successful claims made before the European Court of Human Rights, only 15% are made by women. The rest are made by men (53%) and anonymous applicants or organisations.
In a similar vein, individuals who can afford a lawyer before UN Treaty Bodies seem to be more successful in having their claim declared admissible and proceed to the merits stage than claimants who appear on their own. And we know almost nothing about how many elderly or disabled victims of human rights violations actually end up in court.
Whilst current scholarship has blamed such disparities on inconsistencies in adjudication and on the opacity of rules regulating access to international justice, the examples raise questions of systemic fairness and potential inequality in accessing justice for different groups of claimants.
In an era of increasing inequality and loud expressions of racial, ethnic, gender, and other prejudice, this project investigates how our current structures and practices - as international lawyers - create and perpetuate inequities for less powerful groups.
About the role The Department of Political Science is seeking applications for a full-time Postdoctoral Research Associate. The position is part of the BreaktheBias Project, funded by UKRI and led by Professor Veronika Fikfak.
The Postdoctoral Research Associate will be responsible for data collection from different human rights case law databases, coding (including machine learning) and data analysis. They will also assist with mapping out different actors that facilitate access to justice and be involved in tracing barriers to justice. The Associate will work closely with other members of the team. They will be expected to present their work at academic conferences and workshops.
The position is available from October 2025, for 36 months.
The salary for the Research Associate position will be £44,480 - £46,796 (incl London Allowance), depending on experience.
We encourage applications from those who are underrepresented in the sector and at UCL including but, not exclusive, to non-graduates, disabled, D/deaf and neurodiverse people, LGBTQ+ people, people from Black, Asian and ethnic minority backgrounds, especially women.
Deadline for applications is 4th July 2025.
If you have any queries related to the role, please contact Professor Veronika Fikfak (
[email protected]).
If you have any queries related to the application process, please contact Niamh Sutton (
[email protected]).
About you The post holder will be expected to have a PhD in law or political science and skills to handle large dataset and conduct quantitative analysis and other empirical analysis.
Familiarity with LLM (large language models) to extract data from case law desirable.
Knowledge and understanding of the processes before international human rights systems of would be a very important asset.
Knowledge of French/Spanish also an asset.
What we offer As well as the exciting opportunities this role presents we also offer some great benefits some of which are below: 41 Days holiday (including 27 days annual leave 8 bank holiday and 6 closure days) Defined benefit career average revalued earnings pension scheme (CARE) Cycle to work scheme and season ticket loan On-Site nursery On-site gym Enhanced maternity, paternity and adoption pay Employee assistance programme: Staff Support Service Discounted medical insurance
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