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findings You should have a relevant PhD qualification and experience of conducting qualitative research. You will be working in the Department of Primary Care and Mental Health and at NHS sites in the North
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environment, and benefit from diverse project team skill and expertise. The successful candidate should have a PhD in cartilage, stem cell or protease biology (or a related discipline). Expertise in mammalian
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. You will also contribute to publications and grant applications. Training will be provided as needed. You should have a PhD degree in a biomedical science-related subject and significant experience in
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epidemiology, data science, and policy to produce high-quality, policy-relevant evidence with real-world impact. You should have a PhD (or near completion) in public health, epidemiology, data science, applied
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. An ability to use diverse methods in the pursuit of applied knowledge is preferred and a PhD, completed or near to completion, in a relevant discipline required. You will have experience of working
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operators, academic institutions, maritime training providers, and technology developers to address a critical skills gap in the safe handling, design, and operation of low- and zero-emission maritime
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project supported by funds from the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC). The project aims to examine emotion processing and emotion regulation in people with convictions for sexual and violent
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production using historical and future climate simulations. The candidate will be expected to be responsible for conducting model simulations, interrogating results and integrating new processes and mechanisms
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activities, and will be supported to develop their own independent research trajectories and career pathways throughout the project with access to bespoke training and conference budgets. You should have a PhD
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advanced catalytic materials, as well as evaluating and optimising plasma-catalytic processes for CO2 hydrogenation. You will work to get new insights into the reaction mechanisms in plasma-catalytic CO2