PhD scholarship “Climate Futures in Digital Migration and Border Control”

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Deadline: 14 Feb 2026
Affiliation: Leuphana University Lüneburg - School of Culture and Society

We are currently looking for a PhD researcher to work on questions and issues related to the theme of “Climate Futures in Digital Migration and Border Control”. We invite prospective candidates to develop their own research project within this theme (see further details below). The PhD-researcher will be part of a larger research group on “Climate Futures in Digital Cultures” at the Centre for Digital Cultures at the Leuphana University Lüneburg. Proposals should have a clear link to digital migration and border controls in context of the looming climate crisis. The PhD-student will be co-supervised by Stephan Scheel and Anna Lisa Ramella.

The deadline for applications is 14 February. Interviews are scheduled for 23 February.

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Climate Futures in Digital Migration and Border Control

So far, the nexus between climate breakdown and border and migration management has mostly been discussed in relation to climate-induced migration and how to regulate it. This research area invites proposals for PhD-projects that engage with the manifold interconnections between climate change and digital migration and its regulation beyond this narrow focus. It particularly welcomes proposals that engage with the following as well as related themes and questions:

The ecological footprint of border controls, both in terms of physical trash and debris generated by border infrastructures as well as emissions caused by energy-intensive digital modes of border control, such as by ‘smart border’ programs or ‘seamless travel’ schemes based on digital travel credentials.

The role of digital technologies in(self-)organizing as well as governing and ‘managing’ climate refugees and climate-induced migration.

The production of data and numerical facts about climate migration through forecasts and estimates and how related imagined futures of climate-induced migration reconfigure border and migration regimes in the present.

Critical engagements with far-right discourses and mobilizations around ‘ecobordering’ (Turner and Bailey 2025) which blame immigration for national environmental degradation in order to call for further border restrictions while fostering racist anti-migrant narratrives.

Digital and traditional modes of bordering implicated by attempts of the upper-class to protect themselves (and their wealth) from the effects of the looming climate catastrophe, for example by buying property and building bunkers in areas deemed safe.

See below the link to the application platform.

More info on the PhD-program: https://www.leuphana.de/en/graduate-school/career-funding/scholarship/embracing-transformation-phd-and-scholarship-programme.html

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