178 web-developer-university-of-liverpool Postdoctoral positions at University of Oxford
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by the EPSRC. The research will involve developing new controlled polymerization catalysts to deliver carbon dioxide-derived and bio-derived polymers. The catalysts, and processes, used to make
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mechanisms by which FAT protocadherins contribute to chromosomal instability and eventually shape cancer evolution. We are seeking a highly motivated and ambitious Postdoctoral Researcher to join our team
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12 months. The project involves developing nanopore sensing technologies for functional biomolecules and is funded by Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. Find out more about the research and group
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Science Park. The post is funded by Innovate UK and is fixed-term to 30th April 2026. The CEBD project is an ambitious programme to develop the first category enhanced battery powered eVTOL. The project
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The University of Oxford is a stimulating work environment, which enjoys an international reputation as a world-class centre of excellence. Our research plays a key role in tackling many global
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, University of Oxford to study the interplay of ADP-ribosylation and ubiquitylation signalling in regulation of immunity and genome stability. The post-holder will be responsible for managing own academic
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collaborators and colleagues from within the University to achieve a range of real-world outcomes. Typical outputs include top-tier scientific publications, patents, and seeing collaborators translate our work
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establish and validate microfluidic co-culture systems using human glomerular cells and benchmark these platforms against human kidney multi-omic and spatial datasets. These systems will be further developed
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based at University College London and the Environmental Change Institute at the University of Oxford, with offices in both London and Oxford. The new research group is supported by long-term funding from
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About the role We have an exciting opportunity to join the dynamic research group led by Dr Jie Yang in the Department of Oncology at the University of Oxford. The group conducts research on T cell