63 computer-programmer-"DIFFER"-"U"-"U.S"-"Humboldt-Stiftung-Foundation" positions at University of Bristol
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having completed a PhD programme in the last 12 months) to participate in a fixed-term set of projects linked to prostate cancer health services research, with the ultimate aim of strengthening your track
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or Associate Professor contingent upon skills, qualifications, and experience. Deliver an ambitious, internationally leading research portfolio. Develop portfolios of funding to resource your research programme
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(AstraZeneca, Evotec and Genentech) and EPSRC-funded programmes of research, working with synthetic chemists to test our machine learning systems against challenging real world examples. The role holder will
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-building and cross-sector collaboration. A track record of educational innovation and student-centred programme design. Commitment to equality, diversity, and inclusion in leadership. Effective governance
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We are seeking to appoint a post-doctoral Research Associate to support a research programme funded by the Medical Research Council that investigates neural mechanisms underlying susceptibility
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are safe, compliant, cost-effective, and aligned with University standards and strategic goals. Identifying and resolving risks and issues that affect scope, programme or quality. Overseeing remedial works
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improve standards of medicines use compared with usual general practice care. The project, funded by the NIHR Health Service and Delivery Programme, has three core objectives: successful implementation
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has a dedicated programme manager and administrator to support team members deliver an ambitious and exciting programme of work. Interview date: w/c 8th September 2025. This post will provide initially
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excellence in the pathophysiological, genetic and psychosocial causes of chronic pain. You will be encouraged to develop your own independent research programme and collaborate with other research scientists
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) performing an experimental validation programme. The project is an interdisciplinary collaboration of researchers at the University of Bristol and researchers at the University of Lille, France, and the