Published: 21 Apr 2026 4 views
The Department of Criminology at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law, in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany (Director: Professor Jean-Louis van Gelder) is seeking to recruit for a PhD Position Short Term Mindsets and Crime: An Experimental Approach from the earliest possible starting date. Max Planck Institute is looking for a highly motivated PhD candidate with a strong interest in experimental and interdisciplinary research on crime, decision making, and human cognition. You will join an international and interdisciplinary team to advance a cutting-edge research program on the role of short-term mindsets in crime, with a particular focus on experimental methods to study situational influences and state-level short-term mindsets.
The ideal candidate has a background in psychology, criminology, behavioral science, or a related field, and a strong interest in experimental methods with ecological validity.
Why are some people more likely to commit a crime than others? Answers to this question can be grouped into two broad views. Criminology has long debated whether crime is best explained by stable traits (i.e., morality, self-control), as argued by dispositional perspectives, or by social and situational influences (e.g., peers, financial hardship), as proposed by sociogenic perspectives. Research into both kinds of perspective has identified hundreds of correlates of criminal behavior, yet it remains unclear how these different influences interact in real time, why crime propensity fluctuates across situations, and how some individuals avoid crime even in highly criminogenic environments.
A recently proposed theory, Short-Term Mindsets Theory (STMT; Van Gelder & Frankenhuis, 2025; Van Gelder et al., 2025), offers a new way forward by unifying the many fragmented predictors of crime. STMT proposes that these diverse influences are connected through an underlying mechanism, namely Short-term mindsets (STM): the degree to which individuals focus on immediate vs. long-term outcomes. Understanding how this focus emerges, fluctuates, and can be shifted can provide criminology with a powerful framework for explaining and predicting crime.
This PhD position is part of the Short-Term Mindsets research program at the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Crime, Security and Law. The successful candidate will contribute to this agenda by designing and conducting experimental empirical studies on the causes and consequences of short-term mindsets. More specifically, this project focuses on the situational side of STMT: when, how, and for whom do specific contexts activate short-term mindsets, and how does this shape behavioral outcomes? Using innovative approaches (e.g., virtual reality studies, smartphone applications, and potentially mobile laboratory data collection in real-world settings), the project will experimentally manipulate situational triggers to test whether they shift individuals’ momentary (state) STM, and in turn influence decision making. A related question is who is most sensitive to situational STM activation, and why. People differ in how strongly their cognition shifts in response to criminogenic cues, and some of this variation may reflect adaptive responses shaped by the environments in which they grew up. There is scope to develop your own research ideas within this framework — for example, by focusing on specific situational triggers, decision making processes, behavior, or the developmental and environmental factors that shape situational sensitivity.
You will join an ambitious interdisciplinary team in Freiburg im Breisgau and collaborate with international researchers in criminology, psychology, and related fields. Together, we aim to push the boundaries of current crime research and build new approaches to crime prediction.
You have
Ideal candidates are committed to open science and transparent research practices. Speaking German is an asset but not a prerequisite for the position.
To apply, please submit your application with the following documents:
Questions may be directed to Prof. Dr. Dr. Jean-Louis van Gelder ([email protected]) or Dr. Annika Hampel, Recruitment Officer ([email protected])
For more information, kindly visit Max Planck Institute webpage.
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