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The Institute for Infection Prevention and Control (IPC, Head Prof. Dr. Philipp Henneke) is looking as soon as possible for a Bioinformatician (m/f/d, PhD) with focus on the analysis of large
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available from October 2025 under the supervision of Prof. Helfrid Hochegger and Dr. Tony Oliver, at the Genome Damage and Stability Centre, School of Life Sciences. Deadline: 06th of June 2025 PROJECT TITLE
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of the Discrete Choice Experiments in Mozambique and South Africa, and the analysis of the ensuing data Develop computational models of health actors’ decisions and responses to regulatory options Collaborate with
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that the electrolysers operate safely and reliably while fulfilling the intended specifications. The knowledge gained from the experiments will be used to determine the appropriate risk and reliability analysis
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ID: PMP_TRR408_C5 Investigators: Prof. Dr. Allister Loder, TUM Professorship of Mobility Policy, and co-supervised by at least one leading international researcher Requirements
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relationships. You are motivated to acquire new skills and work in a multidisciplinary team. You have practical experience with experimental work and data analysis. You act with attention to quality, integrity
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electron microscopy analysis, Raman spectroscopy, fluid inclusion analysis, potentially appropriate petrochronological methods, and 3D geological modelling. The project will be conducted in partnership with
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that respond to climate change impacts on agriculture and aquaculture. Using the DROPapp, you will support decisions on crop calendars, salt-tolerant varieties, water management, and early warning-based actions
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PhD position - Stress-testing future climate-resilient city and neighbourhood concepts (Test4Stress)
also supervised by Prof. Dr. Jana Sillmann, who is co-leading the Research Unit for Sustainability and Climate Risks (FNK). This Research Unit is devoted to inter- and transdisciplinary research and
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. The project will be carried out under the supervision of Prof. Dr. Julia Heinemann and is entitled Historicizing healing. An actor-centered approach to the intersections of dis/ability, gender, religion and