Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
interdisciplinary environment within EMBRACER and international partners and apply advanced methods like Lagrangian tracking and reanalyses to reveal new insights into atmosphere-ice-ocean feedbacks in the Arctic
-
, reflecting your training needs and career objectives. About 20% of your time will be dedicated to this training component, which includes following courses/workshops as well as training on the job in assisting
-
objectives include Investigating how microplastics affect epithelial differentiation and promote features such as neuroendocrine transformation and cell proliferation. Dissecting the interaction
-
. Erasmus School of Law offers bachelor programmes in Law, Tax Law and Criminology. Next to that, Erasmus School of Law offers a wide variety of master programmes and several postgraduate tracks. At Erasmus
-
models. In this work package, two PhD candidates (one at Wageningen University, one at Utrecht University) will focus on complementary modelling objectives. The candidates will partly work together. Data
-
PhD Position: Activating Heritage as a Mediator for Dialogue and Belonging in an Era of Polarization
needs, including artistic and arts-based research approaches. The objectives of the project are twofold: to further understanding how cultural and heritage institutions can pose as mediators in inclusive
-
Computer Science, Artificial Intelligence, or a related field; Affinity with Reinforcement Learning and Deep Learning. Preferably you have a track record in these fields during your studies, for example in
-
wicked problems. Our purpose is to enable our many partners around the world to track and trace the impact – and the shifting causes and frontiers – of today’s global challenges. Our vision is of a world
-
methodology in which participants keep track of their thoughts and feelings with a view to assessing and treating prolonged grief in everyday life. She also explores the interaction between grief in parents and
-
other research, he examines how nature conservation organisations long made so-called 'primitive' peoples an object of protection. In his current Vici-grant research project Moving Animals: A History of