Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
public-facing role and represent the team externally. About the team: This role is part of the University’s Rights Lab. The Rights Lab is the first large-scale research platform for ending modern slavery
-
-related tasks for the study. About you – You will have a PhD or equivalent in a relevant subject area, or be about to complete you PhD and be able to manage, plan and conduct research as part of the team
-
also promote the work of the PHIRST programme as a whole via various means including presentations. Based at the University of Nottingham University Park Campus, this is a fixed term, part-time (0.6FTE
-
. To apply for this vacancy please click ‘Apply Now’ to complete your details. This is a Fixed-Term post until 31/07/2027, part-time position. Your working hours will be (7.25 hours per week). Please contact
-
in the area of fungal biology, specifically to investigate the sexual biology of the opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. This post is part of a collaborative multinational Wellcome Trust
-
Foundation at the interface of cancer biology and neuronal function investigating how cancer and cancer chemotherapy impacts on sensitisation and pain. As part of a multidisciplinary team based in Nottingham
-
work as part of a multi-disciplinary team coordinating multi-centre UK and international stroke trials. The team are nationally and internationally renowned for their work as Stroke triallists. Clinical
-
of expertise). Experience of geo-coded data analyses and Propensity Score Matching would also be relevant. Expert interviews will also form part of the analyses. Strong theoretical, empirical research and
-
biology of the opportunistic pathogen Aspergillus fumigatus. This post is part of a collaborative multinational Wellcome Trust award involving academic and medical collaborative partners in the UK and South
-
on sensitisation and pain. As part of a multidisciplinary team based in Nottingham, this Post-Doctoral Research Associate/Fellow will support the project entitled “Extracellular vesicles as conduits for the transfer