Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Program
-
Field
-
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
-
from September 2026 or as soon as possible thereafter. Shorter appointments will be considered in exceptional circumstances. The fellowships offer early career researchers the opportunity to develop
-
to identify and analyse key conditions for a successful implementation of ethical governance measures of AI in defence. The postholders will play a central role in developing ethical frameworks
-
challenges, from reducing our carbon emissions to developing vaccines during a pandemic. The Department of Psychiatry is based on the Warneford Hospital site in Oxford – a friendly, welcoming place of work
-
. The project will define new near miss and severe morbidity definitions allowing us to identify electronically when significant events happen. We will then develop a large multi-centre maternity routine dataset
-
the Department of Engineering Science at the University of Oxford. The post is funded by the Oxford Martin Programme on Circular Battery Economies. It is fixed term up to December 2027. You will undertake
-
distributed quantum computation. In this project, we plan to push all of these areas further, with experiments in blind quantum computing, quantum repeaters, and enhanced metrological quantum advantage. We seek
-
collaboration with members of the research team. They will keep record of programme development, statistical analysis and results which may be used for relevant sections of manuscripts, presentations and other
-
Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Assistant in in laser-driven plasma accelerators. The post is available for a fixed-term until 31 May 2029. This project will focus on developing
-
The Oxford Internet Institute has an exciting opportunity to join the Governance of Emerging Technologies research programme, working under the supervision of Professor Brent Mittelstadt and