659 search results for “veiligheid en drawing” in the Staff website
-
State of the European Union 2022: what is to come?
Lecture, Seminar
-
Experience Day Cultural Anthropology & Development Sociology On Campus
Study information, Experience Day
-
Enhancing understanding and effective communication in teaching
Course
-
Telling Stories: Narrative Traditions from South and Southeast Asia
Roundtable
-
Striking a Balance between Local and Global Interests
PhD defence
-
Should rivers and seas have rights?
Lecture, Public Ethics Talks
-
Skills
What skills do students need to function as academic professionals and engaged citizens?
-
Frequently asked questions
You can suggest topics that need to be addressed in these FAQs. Please contact us at our usual email addresses and phone number(s).
-
Critical Caribbean Thought on Colonial Legacies
The Caribbean as we know it today is fundamentally a product of colonial activity and globalisation. Practically everyone that inhabits the Caribbean has ancestors from different continents due to colonial activity, which profoundly affects the area to this day. Caribbean writers, both in the Caribbean…
-
Flash interview with alumnus and new Faculty Advisory Council member Yousef Yousef
Yousef Yousef is a 'self-made man'. But he first obtained his bachelor's degree in tax law in Leiden. 'A CEO needs to have a basic understanding of the principles of law', he says.
-
Students HC Law visit neighbourhood centre: 'You think that's bizarre? Welcome to our world'
Do young people trust the law? That is what HC Law students are trying to find out. Regular guest speaker and social worker Carlito Jones invited the students to the Bezuidenhout-West neighbourhood centre in The Hague to talk to youth workers and neighbourhood police officers: what do they run into…
-
Why you (won’t) vote – A reading list
In November, the Dutch will elect a new parliament. Not all eligible citizens will go out and vote, however. How can this be explained, and how big of a problem is it? International research into voter turnout can shed new light on this issue – and offer possible solutions.
-
Passionate debate on university’s fossil fuel ties
Should Leiden University cut its ties with the fossil fuel industry forthwith? This was the main question in a debate between students and staff. The answer was clearer for some than for others.
-
The new self-evaluation of the Institute of Psychology: ‘The quality of the academic culture is more important’
Better supervision of PhD candidates, clear guidelines on career paths and an MRI scanner that can be accessed by all researchers: these are the recommendations from the new self-evaluation. Colleagues say: ‘This forces us as an institute to formulate our mission and vision more precisely.’
-
Alumni from Brussels: ‘Leiden University has a fantastic reputation here’
They dreamed of Brussels, worked hard and finally succeeded: working for Europe. The list of Leiden University alumni in Brussels is long. A few days before the European elections, Julia Gencheva and Vincent Miča talk about how they ended up in Brussels and what their jobs entail.
-
Report: Tracking down green spaces in The Hague in places you don't always want to be
Although there is considerable evidence that nature in the city is beneficial to both people and animals, we still do not have an overall picture of those benefits. To rectify that, a Leiden PhD candidate and a student – armed with a cargo bike – are using The Hague as a life-size laboratory.
-
Some Contexts and Practices of S&T Foresight and Impact Assessment in Japan
Seminar
-
Hip Hop Diplomacy as Subversive Complicity
Guest Lecture
-
Modes of Human Becoming: Towards a Process Archaeology of Mind
Lecture, Faculty Lecture
-
Manifesting Minutes and Mapping Cosmographies: Time and Place in Early Modern Deccan
Lecture, Annual Leiden Terra Incognita Lecture
-
Leadership and integrity: working towards a safe working environment
Management, Leadership
-
Celebrating 30 Years of IIAS
Festival
-
Harmful Tax Competition in the East African Community
PhD defence
-
Forum Antiquum Lecture Spring 2023: 'The proper time for marriage: Plato vs. Xenophon on law and persuasion'
Lecture
-
"From Epistemicide to ‘Epistemic Disobedience'" by Anne-Maria Makhulu
Lecture
-
Arabic Echoes and Persian Refrains: Devotional Poetry and Intersonicality in Eighteenth- And Nineteenth-Century North India
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Sources and Strategies in Translating the Canonical Readings of the Qur’an: A case study of Sūrat al-ʾAnʿām
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Johan Van Manen’s Tibetan and Himalayan Collection: The Challenges of Multi-media Research
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
With kind regards: 22 November 2022
Lecture
-
Van de Waallezing 2023: Maarten van Heemskerck, Rome and classical mythology
Alumni event, Lezing
-
POSTPONED - Arabic Echoes and Persian Refrains: Devotional Poetry and Intersonicality in Eighteenth- And Nineteenth-Century North India
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Why We All Need Philosophical and Scientific Analysis in the History of Philosophy, History of Political Thought, and Intellectual History
Lecture, PCNI Research Seminar
-
LGBTIQ+ Employee Resource Groups: Benefits, Challenges and Opportunities
Debate, Symposium
-
When International Organisations Undermine State Capacity: A Responsibility Paradox
Lecture
-
Film Screening: Foragers
Lecture, Teach-In Series on Palestine and Israel
-
Arrested Development: The Soviet Union in Ghana, Guinea, and Mali, 1955-1968
Lecture, INVISIHIST event
-
Online Kress Talks with Felicity Good and Alec Aldrich
Lecture
-
LUCIR Annual Lecture: Three Modes of Anarchy
Lecture
-
MODIFED: Morphosyntactic Dialect Feature Detection Workshop
Workshop
-
Faculty of Archaeology launches dinosaur-focused research
Many an archaeologist, at some point in their career, is asked what type of dinosaur they discovered. Instead of once again patiently explaining that we do not do dinosaurs, the Faculty Board has now decided to listen to society’s call. ‘It is clear that the general public feels that dinosaurs are relevant…
-
University diversity policy is alive and kicking: ‘We need to acknowledge each other’s experiences’
Leiden University has had a diversity policy since 2014. The aim is to create a diverse and inclusive learning and working environment for all students and staff. Diversity Officer Aya Ezawa updates us on the process and the results. It’s now 2022, what has already changed?
-
A Matter of Speech: Language of Social Interdependency in the Early Islamicate Empire (600-1500)
Conference
-
4 - 6 April 2023 - Leiden University Career Event
Course, Online Career Week
-
On not seeing like a state: How archaeology can inform critiques of the inevitability of hierarchy, dispossession, and disconnection of the human
Lecture, Faculty Lecture
-
CANCELLED - Museum Talk: Negotiating museums and their digital interfaces
Lecture
-
Reimaging Peace Democratization in Yemen: Women, Transnationalism and Activism in Exile
Lecture, Leiden Yemeni Studies Lecture Series
-
The Future of faith and responsible technology & AI
Lecture
- Putting the open engagement of societal actors into practice
-
Conference Museums, Collections and Society
Conference
- Workshop: Wisdom literature in the Islamicate Middle Ages