Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
economic policy issues with social relevance. Job description The PhD position is funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF), through the project “The Economics of Inheritance and Inter-Vivos
-
the project's overall research goals, collaborate closely with the whole team help with admin tasks, conference organization, communication tasks, webpage content management. Your profile As a doctoral candidate
-
to estimate both contemporary and past effective population sizes. With these in hands, the project aims to verify how well reported dynamics of decline in rare plant species align with inferred trajectories
-
research findings at international conferences actively participate in advancing the project's overall research goals, collaborate closely with the whole team help with administration tasks, conference
-
regulatory frameworks. This research field is highly interdisciplinary and involves close collaboration with partners from both academia and industry. Project background The PhD project aims at advancing our
-
, Switzerland, invite applications for a fully funded, four-year (1 plus 3) PhD position in the Swiss National Research Foundation project “Feeding the Earth: Synthetic Fertilizers and the Remaking of Agriculture
-
within a world-class team. The successful candidate will ideally start work in the first three months of 2026. Under supervision, coordinating and managing a research project including carrying out
-
– Brief overview of your published works, preprints, or conference contributions, highlighting those most relevant to the project's research direction Portfolio – Overview with project summaries and links
-
Marie Skłodowska-Curie doctoral training network “SPACER", which is made up of 21 partners. A total of 17 doctoral candidates will work in this project over a period of 36 months. School: School
-
This doctoral thesis is part of the European Marie Skłodowska-Curie doctoral training network “SPACER", which is made up of 21 partners. A total of 17 doctoral candidates will work in this project over a period