01 Guest-Programme MPIeR 2018-02
01 Guest-Programme MPIeR 2018-02
01 Guest-Programme MPIeR 2018-02
The Guest Programme of the Max Planck Institute for European Legal History enables
scholars from Germany and abroad to use the Institute’s resources. The visitors and their
projects are an important part of the academic discourse at the Institute. They contribute to the
Institute’s four Research Focus Areas – ‘Multinormativity’, ‘Translation’, ‘Legal Spaces’,
‘Conflict Regulation’ – and ground the results of our work more solidly in international debates.
The Programme offers various forms of grants and other financial support dependent on the
level of qualification, the current project phase as well as the reason for and duration of the
research stay.
1. Target Groups
PhD students
Three funding options are available in order for PhD students to become acquainted with the
Research Focus Areas and procedures of the Institute and to further develop their own
research projects.
Orientation Scholarships are open to all PhD students at the beginning of the dissertation
process, affording them the opportunity to plan and conceptualise a dissertation project at the
Institute within the context of the existing Research Fields and over a period of two to six
months.
Dialogue Scholarships run for one to three months and are intended for all advanced PhD
students seeking a close working contact with a researcher from the Institute in order to profit
from his/her expertise with respect to sources, debates, methodology and theoretical
approaches.
The Max Planck Summer Academy for Legal History welcomes all PhD candidates and
other junior scholars for an annual two-week course. The theme of the summer academy
rotates annually. Both members of the Institute and scholars from associated institutions will
provide introductions to sources, methods and theoretical foundations of legal history.
Beyond the Guest Programme, Support Contracts (Fördervertrag) offer employment at the
Institute for a period of three years to work on a doctoral dissertation.
Page 1
External Experts
Established foreign scholars whose doctorate was awarded at least ten years ago can apply
for a Research Fellowship, which enables them to visit the Institute as a visiting fellow in
order to pursue their own research here. These fellowships run for three or six months.
Project-Oriented Research Fellowships are intended to let the Research Fields at the
Institute profit from the expertise of foreign researchers. The fellowships can be awarded once
a year for a topic chosen by the project group leaders and run for up to two years.
Research Groups
Groups of international researchers with doctoral degrees who wish to pursue a joint research
project can collectively apply for a fellowship at the MPIeR. Such groups can consist of two to
four researchers, ideally from different countries. The applicants for Research Group
Fellowships may not be affiliated with the same institution nor have been affiliated with the
same institution within the last two years. These fellowships run for three to six months.
2. Objectives
The graduate student scholarships are designed to integrate highly qualified scholars into
an international research environment early in their careers. Personalized Orientation
Scholarships enable all PhD students to enrich their research projects by acquainting
themselves with the Institute’s Research Fields and to situate it in ongoing scholarly debates.
Dialogue Scholarships are designed to hone ongoing doctoral projects through discussion
with MPIeR specialists and targeted support. They are not, however, meant as a ‘completion
grant’. The Max Planck Summer Academy for Legal History exposes participants to new
and potentially unfamiliar methodological and theoretical approaches. Participants gain
familiarity with legal terms and theories as well as the ability to transfer them to other linguistic
and cultural contexts, which helps them to grow and strengthen their own professional
networks.
MPIeR Research Fellowships are designed to enrich the research projects and Research
Focus Areas at the Institute with diverse perspectives by facilitating close cooperation with
established foreign scholars. The goal is foremost to expand ongoing cooperative projects with
foreign research institutes by developing new joint research projects. These research
fellowships may not be used to extend an MPIeR postdoc fellowship.
The MPIeR supports visiting fellows with third-party funding provided there is sufficient
capacity. Applicants should contact the research coordinator well before submitting their
application.
Page 2
All guests are expected to actively participate in the Institute’s activities. Depending on the
duration of the stay, this includes
Doctoral students can apply for an Orientation Scholarship at any time at least six months
prior to the planned stay. Applicants should indicate the intended duration of their visit (two to
six months). Applications should be send via email to the research coordinator and include the
applicant’s CV, an exposé of the planned research project (max. 5 pages) and a reference
from a qualified academic referee. All documents must be submitted in PDF format.
The call for applications detailing the thematic focus for that year’s topic is usually circulated
in October of the preceding year. The deadline for applications, including a recent CV and a
project expose (ca. 10 pages) is 31 January. The Summer Academy is held in English, so
command of German is not required.
A selection committee consisting of the directors of the institute and the research coordinator
and will evaluate the applications.
Page 3
The call for applications for the Postdoctoral and Research Fellowships for the subsequent
year is published in February in relevant online forums and publications as well as on the
Institute’s website. These fellowships run for three or six months, usually starting at the
beginning of January, April, July or October. The application deadline is 31 May of the year
preceding the fellowship, so e.g. the deadline for 2020 fellowships is 31 May 2019.
Applicants should submit their completed application forms, CVs and their lists of publications
via the online application system. Furthermore, we request PDF copies of three major
publications the applicant has authored within the last five years as well as the contact details
of two personal referees be submitted as well.
A key document in the selection process is the project outline (2-4 pages), which should detail
the current state of the project as well as plans for its development. This summary should also
explain the project’s connection to the core topics currently being researched at the Institute.
For 2020 the main areas of research pursued at the Institute are:
Only in exceptional cases will research projects not directly related to the Institute’s research
programme be selected.
A selection committee consisting of the two directors and the research coordinator will evaluate
the applications. The committee may include further experts if an application for a Research
Group Fellowship addresses a specialist core topic.
In exceptional cases applications will be accepted at any time, but the selection committee
only meets quarterly to select them (January/April/July/October). Grants for such projects are
pending currently available resources, and all applications must be submitted at least six
months prior to the planned stay.
Scholarship amounts
The amount of funding awarded depends on the recipient’s qualifications. Graduate students
(without doctoral degrees) receive 1365€ per month, post-docs receive 2100€ per month and
recipients of research fellowships receive 2300€ per month. Applicants must obtain health
insurance equivalent to that provided by German Statutory Health Care System for their entire
stay. The MPIeR will subsidise 50% of these insurance costs up to a maximum of 100€ per
month.
Page 4
Page 5