Call for applicants — Three-Years Research Contracts

Deadline (IHC): 15 de Dezembro de 2025
Deadline (FCT): 29 de Janeiro de 2026
Place of work / Hosting institution: Institute of Contemporary History — NOVA FCSH / University of Évora
Call for applicants:
The Institute of Contemporary History (IHC), a leading Portuguese research centre in the field of Modern and Contemporary History, welcomes applications for three-year research contracts, funded by the FCT — Foundation for Science and Technology in the framework of the eighth edition of the Individual Call to Scientific Employment Stimulus.
The IHC has facilities both at NOVA University Lisbon and at the University of Évora. We are also a member of IN2PAST, the Associate Laboratory for Research and Innovation in Heritage, Arts, Sustainability and Territory, and the host of the Digital Humanities Lab, an interdisciplinary space where knowledge in the Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences converges with methodologies from the Computational Sciences.
Joining the IHC means becoming part of a multicultural, creative, collaborative and publicly engaged environment that brings together researchers from the fields of History, Anthropology, Sociology, Arts, Biology, among others. As a Modern and Contemporary History research centre working on a wide range of topics, we regularly collaborate with the media, museums, archives, local authorities, and schools. All these activities are part of our History in the Public Sphere Programme, which promotes the IHC’s involvement in non-academic settings.
The IHC fosters interdisciplinary approaches and covers a wide range of subjects concerning the conceptualisation, contextualisation, and interpretation of the historical reality for the period between the 18th century and the present time. The IHC encourages research approaches that overcome the limits of methodological nationalism and fosters the critical practice of comparative, transnational, and global history; it also considers the centrality of the colonial and anti-colonial question for the history of the contemporary world.
Evaluation panels for this call will include ‘History and Archaeology’, ‘Arts’, ‘Sociology’, ‘Media and Communications, Law and Political Science’, ‘Languages and Literature’, among others. The IHC has accomplished 40 successful applications in the last five editions of this call in diverse panels such as ‘History and Archaeology’, ‘Arts’, and ‘Media and Communications, Law and Political Science’.
Prospective applicants should present their research plan bearing in mind the IHC’s scientific agenda, as reflected on our Research Groups, as well as the conditions set forth in the Scientific Employment Stimulus programme. Applicants with a relevant track-record of securing funding for their research activities are especially welcomed. If hired, researchers are expected to be in-residence at the IHC for the duration of the contract, actively participating both in the intellectual and administrative life of the Institute..
To apply, please send us the following documents and information by 15 December 2025:
- A summary of the work plan (in English; max. 5000 characters);
- The applicable contract level (Junior/Assistant) and evaluation panel;
- A detailed Curriculum vitae;
- A motivation letter explaining your trajectory in the last five years and the relevance of your achievements (max. 5000 characters);
- One copy of a relevant publication.
Please submit your application material or any questions that may arise to Rosa Fina via the email ihc.concursos@fcsh.unl.pt.
Download the call for applicants (PDF)
Other Opportunities
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IHC, OpportunitiesDeadline (IHC): 15 December 2025 -
Highlights, IHC, OpportunitiesDeadline: 18 February 2026
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fevereiro, 2026
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Detalhes do Evento
This meeting seeks to encourage the participation and sharing of ideas calling on the voice of workers and the power of archives as a living tool for knowledge. We
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Detalhes do Evento
This meeting seeks to encourage the participation and sharing of ideas calling on the voice of workers and the power of archives as a living tool for knowledge.
We are with you at home
Domestic work and collective action — Archives, memories, testimonies
In recent decades, the formation of a global economy of care and domestic services has become one of the central elements in understanding the transformations of work in capitalist societies (Ehrenreich and Hochschild, 2002; Lutz, 2011). This process of “international division of reproductive labour” (Parreñas, 2001; Anderson, 2007) is an example of how historical inequalities have been reconfigured and deepened in the transition from colonial to postcolonial contexts (Cox, 2006; Sartri, 2008). The absence of public care policies, combined with labour market deregulation and labour shortages in the sector, has produced a scenario of labour and social precariousness in which gender, ethnicity and class intersect. Employers’ preference for migrant workers—often without residence permits—has allowed the formation of a new servile class, characterised by fragile ties, an almost complete absence of rights and low wages (Giordano, 2022).
This context of structural vulnerability fuels the idea that domestic and care work is marked by social invisibility and a supposed inability to mobilise collectively. However, this interpretation tends to obscure the long history of resistance and organisational experiences led by these workers. Since the 19th century, multiple examples of labour demands and struggles against oppressive practices demonstrate that the sector, far from being disorganised, has been the scene of various forms of mobilisation for better working conditions (Anderson, 2001; Boris and Nadassen, 2008; Gutiérrez-Rodríguez, 2010). To recover and reflect on this historical trajectory is not only an exercise of remembrance, but a necessary step to reinscribe domestic and care work in the global history of labour struggles, challenging narratives that seek to naturalise its subalternity.
>> Registration (free but mandatory)
DOMESTIC AND ARCHIVAL WORK
The title of this meeting is taken from a letter sent by a domestic worker to her union, kept in an archive, with no date, no sender or recipient, only a handwritten note: archive. It reads: ‘And never think you are alone, we are with you in the house where we work.’
We took inspiration for this meeting from this short excerpt, part of a text that describes, in the first person, the early migration to the city of Lisbon to work in someone else’s home at the age of seven.
Work on the archives of women workers’ organisations and the increased focus on trade unionism in the domestic service sector has received growing attention in recent years, throughout the world, partly driven by a renewed interest in the intersection of gender, class and migration inequalities in the sphere of paid domestic work. At this meeting, which will take place on 6 and 7 February 2026 in Lisbon, we are opening a space for, based on the project A Voz das Trabalhadoras (The Voice of Women Workers: The Archives of the Domestic Service Union [1974-1992]), to gather contributions from different geographical areas and fields of practice that intersect around domestic work, care and cleaning — and their articulation with forms of collective action, cooperativism, trade unionism, and memory construction.
Thus, with immersion in trade union archives and experiences of self-management and cooperativism in domestic service as our main starting point, we invite submissions of proposals that focus on the various repertoires of organisation and struggle adopted by workers in this sector/activity, focusing on oral history or archival research, the narration of experiences and self-representations of working conditions and contexts.
A TRANSNATIONAL AND INTERDISCIPLINARY DIALOGUE
Seeking to establish a transnational and interdisciplinary dialogue on these experiences, contributions are welcome in the following areas:
- Archival practices of/on domestic work;
- Migratory flows, citizenship, gender, and racialisation in domestic, cleaning, and care work;
- Collective action, cooperativism, and trade unionism in domestic work.
This meeting seeks to encourage the participation and sharing of ideas among activists, artists, researchers, workers and trade unions — calling on the voice of workers and the power of archives as a living tool for knowledge, learning and transformation.
Call for papers
We therefore invite proposals from different disciplinary fields and with different methodological approaches, welcoming the intersection of perspectives. The Meeting welcomes proposals from:
a) artists (performance, theatre, audiovisual);
b) researchers, archivists, activists and students;
c) domestic and care workers (collectives, cooperatives, trade unions)
Who, where, how?
Send short abstracts (max. 500 words) with a brief biography by 10 November 2025. Submissions to: encontro.trabalhodomestico2026@gmail.com.
Accepted languages: Portuguese, Spanish, English.
Venues: NOVA FCSH, Cape Verde Cultural Centre (Lisbon)
Organisation: CICS.NOVA and IHC
>> Download the call for papers (PDF) <<
Organising Committee
Ackssana Silva
Elsa Nogueira
Inês Brasão
José Soeiro
Mafalda Araújo
Nuno Ferreira Dias
Tempo
6 (Sexta-feira) 9:00 am - 7 (Sábado) 7:00 pm
Localização
NOVA School of Social Sciences and Humanities and Cabo Verde Cultural Centre
Organizador
Institute of Contemporary History and CICS.NOVA — NOVA School of Social Sciences and Humanities

Detalhes do Evento
Ricardo Noronha's book about the events of 25 November 1975 will be presented in Faro, at the Portuguese Institute of Sport and Youth. A Ordem
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Detalhes do Evento
Ricardo Noronha‘s book about the events of 25 November 1975 will be presented in Faro, at the Portuguese Institute of Sport and Youth.
A Ordem Reina Sobre Lisboa. Uma história do 25 de Novembro
A CÍVIS, Associação para o o Aprofundamento da Cidadania, dia 6 de fevereiro, em Faro, a apresentação do livro “A Ordem reina sobre Lisboa. Uma história do 25 de Novembro”, da autoria de Ricardo Noronha.
A sessão terá lugar no auditório do IPDJ, a partir das 18h30, com entrada livre, e assinala a apresentação pública da obra editada pela Tigre de Papel, em Novembro de 2025.
A CÍVIS convida todas e todos os cidadãos a participarem nesta apresentação, de entrada livre, sublinhando a importância do debate para uma melhor compreensão do significado histórico e político do 25 de Novembro.
Sobre o livro:
Este livro aproveita a efeméride cinquentenária para explorar algumas hipóteses e interrogações relativas ao 25 de Novembro, procurando identificar tanto aquilo que se apresenta como indisputável quanto as inúmeras questões que permanecem em aberto. É também uma tentativa de abrir a interpretação do processo revolucionário a formas de imaginação histórica distintas das que têm caraterizado boa parte da paisagem editorial. Ao privilegiar os acontecimentos ocorridos nas ruas, ou dentro dos quartéis, em relação aos que tiveram lugar nos gabinetes ministeriais, ou dentro dos estados-maiores, a reconstrução dos acontecimentos que aqui se apresenta procura compreender o 25 de Novembro enquanto um episódio de insubordinação militar plenamente alinhado com os repertórios de conflituosidade social e de radicalização política que caraterizaram a Revolução Portuguesa de 1974-75.
Mais informações sobre o livro
Tempo
(Sexta-feira) 6:30 pm - 7:30 pm
Localização
Portuguese Institute of Sport and Youth — Faro
Rua da Policia da Seguranca Publica, 1 — 8000-151 Faro
Organizador
CÍVIS and Portuguese Institute of Sport and Youth
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