Fully Funded PhD in Waste Work, Circular Economy, and Plastics in Urban Kenya (Mombasa, Nairobi, or Busia)
Kenyatta University is advertising
three fully funded PhD scholarships
under the
PlastiCITIES: Changing Waste Work in Urban Kenya
research project. The project examines the social dimensions of the
circular economy for plastics
and the changing forms of
waste work
in
Nairobi
,
Mombasa
, and
Busia
.
The advertised positions are for PhD candidates who will be enrolled at
Kenyatta University
, in the
Department of Environmental Studies and Community Development
. Each project site focuses on a different urban context: Mombasa (ocean plastics and informal inclusion), Nairobi (dense urban waste flows and private-sector waste management), and Busia (border-town plastics and contraband flows from Uganda).
The research is interdisciplinary and strongly oriented toward the social sciences, with relevance to
anthropology
,
sociology
,
development studies
,
environmental studies
,
political science
, and
law
. The project investigates how waste workers collect, sort, broker, wash, and process plastics, and how new markets, recycling technologies, and government policies are reshaping livelihoods and labor conditions in the plastics economy.
Funding:
the positions are fully funded and include a competitive stipend and educational fees. The scholarship runs for three years starting in
September 2026
and includes a research stay in
Denmark
. Students will also have the opportunity to use office space at
Busara
.
Eligibility highlights:
applicants should have at least a bachelor’s degree with minimum Second Class Honours and a master’s degree with Excellent or Credit in a relevant social sciences discipline. The call prefers candidates with qualitative methods experience, prior fieldwork experience, research experience in East Africa, and interest in waste, circular economy, or environmental governance. Strong academic writing and communication skills are required.
Application window:
deadline is
05 July 2026 at 12:00 PM East African Time
. Applicants must submit a single PDF containing a concept note of about four pages (maximum 1,600 words excluding references), CV, certified certificates and transcripts, MA thesis, relevant publications, and contact details for two academic referees. Applications are sent by email to the named supervisors, with the subject line specified for the chosen site.
Supervision:
the main supervisor is
Dr. Eric Kioko
at Kenyatta University, with co-supervision by
Prof. Ben Jones
at the University of Copenhagen. The collaboration also includes Hannah Elliott, Mario Schmidt, Juhi Jain, and Akinyi Eurallyah.