29 requirements-engineering-"https:"-"https:"-"https:" positions at Erasmus University Rotterdam in Netherlands
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external delivers software engineering and consulting, builds customised software, and provides functional application support for our business lines. Demand management, IT purchasing and ordering
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engineering, information systems, computational social science or a closely related technical field; a PhD is an asset but not required. You have at least 2 years of experience in technical leadership roles
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on learning, instruction, and educational technology within the team Educational Sciences at Erasmus University Rotterdam. The project is enabled by research funding from the Dutch Knowledge Institute
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engaging with communities outside of academia. There are no specific research specialization nor methodology requirements. We particularly encourage applicants whose work incorporates and centers
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engaging with communities outside of academia. There are no specific research specialization nor methodology requirements. We particularly encourage applicants whose work incorporates and centers
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to societal developments, technology, international cooperation, new threats and vulnerabilities, etc. This leads to a need for new logistical operational concepts for land, with exploration of air and marine
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experiment with new solutions and co-develop pathways of how academic systems can better support just sustainability transitions. Job requirements As a PhD researcher, you will develop and carry out your own
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to explore and implement efficient solutions that are needed for facilitating IT support. You will work closely together with our IT Demand Manager. Job description IT orders Place orders at our preferred
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positioned as belonging. These imaginaries are shaped not only by cultural storytelling but also by governance frameworks and risk-management logics that increasingly frame heritage sites as spaces requiring
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spaces. The project also critically engages with the growing securitisation of heritage and tourism, whereby heritage sites are increasingly framed as objects of risk requiring surveillance, control, and