Message posted on 05/06/2021

WG: Fully funded doctoral position, SNSF funded project on "digital payments"

                Dear colleagues,



Please find attached a call for applications for a fully funded PhD position
the Department of Sociology at the University of Lucerne (Switzerland), as
part of a Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF) project on "Digital
payments: Making payments personal and social":

To complete the research team (total of 1 post-doc, 80% position, and 2
doctoral students, each 100% research positions) of the SNSF funded project on
"Digital payments: Making payments personal and social," I am looking for a
doctoral student who could conduct fieldwork in Sweden, preferably in Swedish.
The doctoral student will carry out qualitative, narrative interviews with
users of digital payment apps in Sweden and observe how they interact in
payment situations with others, e.g. retailers, banks, apps. Prior training in
qualitative data collection and analysis is a plus. Local knowledge of Sweden
is also a plus.

Here is a summary of the project, FYI:
This research project asks How do digital payments create, shape, and alter
social relations in the digital economy? Building on current sociological
research on payments and the data economy, the project examines practices and
future imaginaries of users, retailers, banks, fintech and other
intermediaries with regard to payment apps and the production of digital data.
The project proposes that payment apps are central devices in the
digitaleconomy: They provide for streams of user-generated transactional data
- the economic assets - including purchasing preferences, amount spent,
location, and time. Moreover, payment apps also produce transactional data
that can be linked to other streams of trace data from that shopper's
smartphone. Such transactional data bring into focus relations between payment
app users, retailers, banks, fintech intermediaries, and marketing agencies.
The project proposes that digital payments alter existing and create new
relations. For companies, payment apps may serve as the so far missing prism
to see whole chains of transactions between users, customers, banking
industry, retailers, and brands, which in turn allow for enhanced
"personalized recommendations." For users, payment apps may become social
media, ease and increase consumption-they are also another element in the
engineered reciprocal relations of data given to receive services. The project
contends that in digital payments two fundamental mechanisms of the digital
economy concomitantly interconnect: processes of personalization and
relational embedding on the basis of transactional data. The project's goals
are (1) to identify and describe the practices and future imaginaries of
payments and data, (2) to analyze changes in existing social relations and the
creation of new relations, and (3) to explain processes of personalization and
relational embedding in the data economy.
The project draws on the economic sociology and anthropology on money and
payment, platform studies, and a transdisciplinary field of science and
technology studies and the sociology on future imaginaries and expectations as
drivers for innovation. Empirically, the project examines the field of digital
payments from the perspectives of customers, retailers, and the banking
industry in two contrasting cases: in Switzerland, where digital payments
usage is low and in Sweden, where digital payments usage is pervasive. To
obtain insights into changing and new relations, the project focuses on
practices and narrated future imaginaries of diverse sets of actors involved
in the field of digital payments in both Switzerland and Sweden. Using a
multi-methodological research design, the project works with unique data sets.
Data collection is based on traditional qualitative methods of interviews and
ethnographic fieldwork as well as on collecting textual data from archival and
digital documents. Data analysis rests on pattern search based on systematic
close readings as well as on large-scale computational textual analysis. Four
subprojects investigate (1) retail customers and retail companies in
Switzerland, (2) banking and fintech industry in Switzerland and comparatively
in Sweden, (3) digital payments in everyday life in Sweden, and (4)
macroscopically, future imaginaries of policy makers, lobbyists, and business
consultancies globally, in Switzerland, and in Sweden. The research project
will make key contributions to an economic sociology of payments. In doing so,
it will advance debates and empirical research on the digital economy and data
capitalism.

Here is a link to the job ad
https://www.unilu.ch/universitaet/personal/personaldienst/offene-stellen/doct
oral-student-position-100snsf-funded-project-digital-payments-1645611/

For further information please contact Prof. Sophie Mtzel, PhD.

- - - - - - -
Prof. Sophie Mtzel, Ph.D.
Universitt Luzern
Soziologisches Seminar
Frohburgstrasse 3
CH-6002 Luzern
T +41 41 229 55 63
sophie.muetzel@unilu.ch
unilu.ch/sophie-muetzel
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