1,187 search results for “middle east noort africa” in the Staff website
-
Opening academic year
University ceremony
-
Flash interview with alumna Liz Kool about her choice for a career with social impact
Kool made a conscious choice to work for a non profit organisation. Recently, inspired by the pandemic, she also made a career switch.
-
Dorine Schellens and Peter Verstraten win the LUCAS Public Engagement Award 2023
The LUCAS Impact Committee, consisting of Jan van Dijkhuizen, Rick Honings, Casper de Jonge, Angus Mol, Thijs Porck and Aafje de Roest, has offered this year’s LUCAS Public Engagement Award to Dorine Schellens and Peter Verstraten.
-
While doing research on victimhood, Criminology student Sara suffered a serious injury and became a victim herself
In the middle of doing research for her master’s thesis, Sara Kalf (24) was hit by a car and got seriously injured. After a long period of rehabilitation and hard work, this week she can finally add her signature to the wall of the Academy Building’s ‘Sweat Room’.
-
Graduation MIRD Class of 2022: Students in the spotlight
On Monday, 4 July 2022, the graduation of the two-year Advanced MSc International Relations and Diplomacy (MIRD) programme was commemorated in the iconic Academy Building in Leiden. Students and guests were welcomed by the Program Director, Professor Madeleine Hosli.
-
Not only full professors: the entire examining committee can now wear academic dress
Permission was recently given for all members of the examining committee and co-supervisors at PhD ceremonies to wear academic dress, even if they’re not full professors. How historic is this change?
-
‘A country’s immigration narrative really influences the people arriving there’
Immigration and naturalisation policies are an important theme in the upcoming Dutch elections. The Netherlands should be mindful of its immigration narrative, says PhD candidate Hannah Bliersbach, as this greatly influences the relationship between ‘new’ citizens and their new home country.
-
Stretching in the courtyard, yoga in the restaurant: how colleagues keep fit together
It’s not healthy but we often do it anyway: sit hunched at our computer for hours on end. But exercising and relaxing at work doesn’t have to be complicated. These staff members have come up with fun and easy ways to help their colleagues stay fit and healthy. ‘You don’t need sportswear and won’t end…
-
Introducing: Manon Post and Efstathia Dionysopoulou
Manon Post and Efstathia Dionysopoulou recently joined the Institute for History as a PhD candidate and postdoc in the framework of the 'Anchoring Innovation' program. Below, they introduce themselves!
-
‘Looking back, this past year will be a very important period in my life’
At the Faculty of Science, forty per cent of the employees are of a non-Dutch nationality. Amongst PhDs that is even sixty per cent. How are they doing in a time of working at home in a different culture, when travelling is not possible? Clinical pharmacologist Lu Chen is the third in this series to…
-
Leiden Slavist in Ukraine: ‘My love for Russia has faded’
To read Chekhov in the ‘original’. That was what motivated Arie van der Ent to study Slavic languages and literature with Karel van het Reve at Leiden University. ‘My love for Chekhov hasn’t faded,’ says Van der Ent from his home 60 kilometres south of Kyiv. ‘But it has for the rest of Russia.’
-
Staff symposium on student well-being: ‘Let’s talk more about adversity’
How can we help our students build resilience and prevent unnecessary stress? And how do we break the taboo on failure? These and other questions are what study advisers, lecturers, deans and student support staff discussed at the staff symposium on student well-being at PLNT.
-
Fifty years of diplomatic relations with China: an ‘open and pragmatic’ partnership
This year, the Netherlands and China reflect on fifty years of diplomatic relations at ambassadorial level. How has the relationship between the countries developed over the past half century? An interview with university lecturer Vincent Chang.
-
Dissertation: The strategic role of ceasefires in civil wars
The impact of a ceasefire shifts over the course of a conflict, as conflict party leaders learn more about each other’s military and political aspirations and adapt their use of ceasefires accordingly. That’s the key message of the dissertation of Valerie Sticher, PhD-candidate at the Faculty of Governance…
-
A university in times of corona: one year on
It is exactly one year ago that the university had to close, bang in the middle of the academic year. Suddenly, on that third Monday in March, we found ourselves at home, working and studying online – many of us from that cramped attic or student room. The momentous coronavirus year in pictures.
-
Poor countries recycle far more of our plastic than we thought. But it's not enough.
Countries that import plastic waste recycle an average of at least 63 percent of it. This is surprising, as we previously believed that the vast majority was incinerated or ended up as litter. This was discovered by PhD candidate Kai Li and his colleagues from the Institute of Environmental Sciences in…
-
CANCELLED: Disease and Violence in Shift from Omurano to Urarina on the Urituyacu River in Peru
Lecture, Language & the Human Past Lecture Series
-
Relational Multilateralism: the Play of International United Front in China’s Global Grand Strategy
Lecture
-
Lecture by Michael Mazarr on 'Deterring China: Challenges and Opportunities'
Lecture
-
History Research Master Symposium
Conference
-
CMGI Brown Bag Seminar
Lecture, CMGI Brown Bag Seminar
-
Literature as Commons: Re-reading Natsume Sōseki's Kokoro
Lecture
-
“De” outside the cleft: An evidential operator in the C domain
Lecture, CHiLL series
-
LTA lunch lecture - Gamification in Higher-Ed: Promises, Practices, and Pitfalls
Lecture
-
Memories of Cinema-Going in Postwar Japan: An Ethno-history
Lecture
-
Hephthalites, Romans, and Arabs: the Grand Strategy of the Sasanian Empire
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
“Was the Habsburg Empire an Empire?”
Lecture, Fourth Annual Leiden Austrian Studies Lecture
-
The Most Popular Buddhist Illustrated Book of circa 1450
Lecture, China Seminar
-
CMGI Brown Bag Seminar
Lecture, CMGI Brown Bag Seminar
-
The Politics of Education in Contemporary Vietnam
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
Racial Capitalism, Sexuality and Labour: Experience of Young Northeast Women in the Spa Industry in Hyderabad, India
Lecture
- I wouldn't start from here making the case for Outcome Trajectory Evaluation
-
Why Poetry? A Sufi Response
Lecture, Leiden Lectures on Arabic Language & Culture
-
Connect & Find: a metadata standard that fits your data
Netwerkbijeenkomst
-
Connect & discover: data registration, deposition and discovery
Network meeting
- The Body Poetic: How identity is formed, negotiated, and renegotiated through interaction between the living and the dead
-
LUCAS PhD Alumni Network Event 2022
Alumni event, Job market Preparation for PhD's
-
Publish or Perish: Religious Zaydi publishers in Yemen during the 1990s
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Jewish Magic from Antiquity to the Twenty-First Century
Lecture
-
Connect & Learn: The decentralized web and safeguarding digital sovereignty
Network meeting
-
Connect & Protect: meet the FGGA Ethics Committee
Network meeting
-
POSTPONED - Roundtable - Russia’s War on Ukraine: Perspectives from and Impacts on Non-European Actors
Debate
-
Bosnian Hajj Literature: Multiple Paths to the Holy
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Connect & Check in: meet the RDM Community
Network meeting
-
Connect & Reuse: practical use cases from public health
Netwerkbijeenkomst
-
Book Launch | Precarious Modernities: Assembling State, Space and Society on the Urban Margins in Morocco
Book Launch
-
Roundtable Discussion: Reorienting Islamic Studies in Asia
Debate
-
Demons, Monks, and Merchants: Fate and Individual Agency in Ming Vernacular Short Stories (huaben)
Lecture, China Seminar
-
In the Making #2: Etienne Kallos, Searching for a Diasporic Time Image
Lecture
-
Lancering The Hague Global Futures Hub
Conference