PhD on Substance Use and Risk Taking Among At-Risk Youth (0.8 FTE for 5 years) (V24.0305)
Job description
We are looking for a highly motivated and qualified PhD candidate for the project "Substance Use and Risk Taking among At-Risk Youth". This project is a collaboration between the Department of Sociology and the Department of Pedagogical and Educational Sciences (GION).
Adolescence is a formative period of life in which adolescents face various developmental tasks related to autonomy, identity formation, and the formation of social relationships. Although these tasks affect all adolescents, there are individual differences in the extent to which adolescents accomplish these tasks (Crone & Dahl, 2012). Specifically, marginalized adolescents, or those at risk of being marginalized within their peer group, may be more likely to develop problem behaviors related to substance use, risk-taking, and mental health problems. In the context of this project, (risk of) marginalization includes any way in which people or groups of people are placed outside of a social group, e.g., through social rejection/exclusion, neglect, or victimization. Marginalized adolescents, including sexually and gender minority adolescents, have higher rates of mental health issues and substance use (Fish et al. , 2020; Mereish, 2019).
Marginalized adolescents may turn to substance use as self-medication for mental health issues caused by social marginalization (Bos et al. , 2016; Felner et al. , 2021). Alternatively, marginalized adolescents might use substances to conform to peer groups norms through social influence processes (Boyle et al. , 2020; Henneberger et al. , 2020). This idea resonates with Moffitt's dual taxonomy of adolescent risk behaviors, which suggests that risk behaviors, including substance use, are often imitated and socially rewarded in terms of peer group status because these behaviors indicate "maturity" (Moffitt, 1993).
To shed more light on these divergent explanations, we aim to examine the role of coping, social dynamics, and social norms in substance use and risk behaviors among (at-risk) marginalized adolescents. Furthermore, to understand these dynamics, it is important to consider the diversity of peer groups to which adolescents belong. Previous work has largely focused on social relationships and norms within the school context to understand substance use and risk behaviors (Laursen & Veenstra, 2021), but for many adolescents, and especially those who are (at-risk for) being marginalized, out-of-school contexts, including online contexts, may provide more rewarding peer groups and a better explanation for their substance use and risk behaviors. Therefore, we aim to advance previous work in three ways:
1) How do different offline and online social settings, each with its own dynamics and social norms, influence substance use and risk behaviors?
2) How do underlying social needs, such as status and affection, shape behavior across contexts?
3) Are substance use and risk-taking responses to marginalization or methods of connecting with peer groups?
To address these questions, we propose a mixed methods approach. First, we plan to conduct in-depth interviews that will provide more insight into the processes, mechanisms, and motivations that explain substance use and risk taking among marginalized adolescents (Felner et al. , 2020). Second, the findings from the in-depth interviews will be used to design a quantitative study in which we will map social relationships across peer contexts using a combination of ego-network approaches, full-network approaches, and daily diaries. This will provide insight into the breadth of adolescents' social networks and their respective functions in meeting social needs.
The tasks of the PhD candidate are:
Organisation
The University of Groningen is a research university with a global outlook, deeply rooted in Groningen, City of Talent. Quality has had top priority for four hundred years, and with success: the University is currently in or around the top 100 on several influential ranking lists.
The Faculty of Behavioral and Social Sciences excels in teaching and research in the fields of human behavior, thinking, learning, and how people live together. We work on societal issues and problems that people experience in daily life. Central to this is individual and societal resilience and how to increase this. To this end, we focus on the topics of migration, the environment and climate, health, upbringing and education, the protection of vulnerable minorities, and sustainable partnerships. The Faculty of Behavioral and Social Sciences employs over 650 staff members. For more information about the Faculty please check the link https://www.rug.nl/gmw/ .
The Department of Sociology in Groningen is known for its research on determinants of social well-being by means of advanced theory formulation and method development as well as systematic integration of theory and empirical research. The student will be trained in the ICS. The Interuniversity Center for Social Science Theory and Methodology (ICS) is an internationally renowned Research Center and Graduate School in the field of Sociology, located in the Netherlands at the Universities of Groningen, Utrecht, Nijmegen, and Amsterdam (UvA).
See also:
https://www.rug.nl/gmw/sociology/?langlang=en
The Department of Pedagogical and Educational Sciences (GION) contributes to better education by conducting academic research. Our goal is to expand the body of knowledge about education and to improve educational practice. See also:
https://www.rug.nl/research/groningen-institute-for-educational-research/
Qualifications
For this position you are expected to
Organisation
Conditions of employment
We offer you in accordance with the Collective Labour Agreement for Dutch Universities:
Intended starting date: 01-09-2024
Application
You can apply by submitting a letter of application and curriculum vitae before June 27, 2024. Only submissions via the application form will be considered.
The selection interviews will take place in the week of July 8, 2024.
The University of Groningen strives to be a university in which students and staff are respected and feel at home, regardless of differences in background, experiences, perspectives, and identities. We believe that working on our core values of inclusion and equality are a joint responsibility and we are constructively working on creating a socially safe environment. Diversity among students and staff members enriches academic debate and contributes to the quality of our teaching and research. We therefore invite applicants from underrepresented groups in particular to apply.
Our selection procedure follows the guidelines of the Recruitment code (NVP): https://www.nvp-hrnetwerk.nl/nl/sollicitatiecode and European Commission's European Code of Conduct for recruitment of researchers: https://euraxess.ec.europa.eu/jobs/charter/code
We provide career services for partners of new faculty Groningen.
Unsolicited marketing is not appreciated.
Functie: | phd on substance use |
Startdatum: | 31-05-2024 |
Ervaring: | Ervaren |
Educatielevel: | HBO |
Contracttype: | Vast |
Salaris: | onbekend – onbekend |
Uren per week: | 1 – 40 |
Heb je interesse in deze vacature en wil je graag op deze functie solliciteren? Neem dan contact op met Rijksuniversiteit Groningen via onbekend of onbekend. Of bezoek hun website onbekend.
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