660 search results for “thijs werkt e2 80 99s discovery” in the Staff website
-
Pieter de la Court Medal winners talk about accessibility and the conditions of education
During the New Year’s Reception on 11 January 2022, the Pieter de la Court Medal was awarded to two students of the Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences: Orestes Kyrgiakis and Claire van den Helder. They tell us about the causes they fight for and what it means for the University to be better.…
-
The future of Europe’s finances
Lecture, European Union Seminar
-
PhD training Case Study and Comparative Methods
Course
-
Conference Power and Counterpower in Democracy
Conference
-
LUCIR Lecture: Inside Gang Governance: How and Why Gangs Rule the Streets of Rio de Janeiro
Lecture
-
Open Q&A with the European Parliament President Roberta Metsola
Lecture
-
Politics and Policy Pre-Analysis Plan (PAP) Workshop
Workshop
-
Third meeting of Leiden University's Being the First student network
Thematic Meeting Being the First
-
AI for Bad: Superpowers, Cydiplo and the Myth of Global Regulation
Lecture
-
"From Epistemicide to ‘Epistemic Disobedience'" by Anne-Maria Makhulu
Lecture
-
The Securitisation of Leiden University
Panel discussion
-
European Mining Conference: Developments in Deep-Sea Mining and the EU Critical Raw Materials Act
Conference
-
When International Organisations Undermine State Capacity: A Responsibility Paradox
Lecture
-
Book presentation ‘Cybersecurity, Privacy and Data Protection in EU Law’
Lecture
-
The Hague Threat Intelligence Exchange (Hague TIX) 2024
Conference
-
OSINT: From Theory, Intelligence to Evidence
Conference
-
Experimental Ethnographies
Lecture
-
International Experience Week for staff
Conference
-
2021: This was the year of our faculty
2021 was an eventful year once again for the Faculty of Governance and Global Affairs (FGGA). Hybrid, working from home, online education, on-campus education, face masks, self-tests, keeping distance, quarantine and the coronavirus. Words that have now become a standard part of our vocabulary when…
-
The Need for Teaching a More Accurate and Inclusive History of Science: The Case of Islamic Contributions to Math and Sciences
Debate
-
Lithium-ion batteries and the transition to electric vehicles
PhD defence
-
Lessons of Democracy: Mothers’ Education and Learning Activities in late-1950s Japan,
Lecture
-
Super-Earth Atmospheres
PhD defence
- IBL Symposium 2022
-
Violence and the State: Perspectives from Ancient India
Lecture, VVIK Lecture
-
Extinction, Extraction, Emergence: Plantation Necrobiopolitics on the West Papuan Oil Palm Frontier
Lecture
-
Beyond the trenches
PhD defence
-
Food stories and the microbiome
Workshop
-
Unravelling cell fate decisions through single cell methods and mathematical models
PhD defence
-
Neutrino: Documentary & Q&A with the directors
Studium Generale
-
Are there questions that should not be raised at university?
Dialogue
-
Following the Pagla Jahaj ['the crazy ship']: The inevitable journey towards the un/familiar
Lecture
-
Manuscript and Early Book Destruction
Conference
-
ESA presents first crystal-clear Euclid photos of the cosmos
The first full-colour images of the cosmos from ESA's space telescope Euclid were presented today. Never before has a telescope been able to take such crystal-clear astronomical images of such a large part of the sky and so far into the deep universe. The five images illustrate Euclid's full potential;…
-
Willem van der Does sheds new light on the at times pitch-black history of psychiatry
Piercing through the skull with an ice pick, administering electric shocks without an anaesthetic, or applying leeches to the uterus: these may seem like medieval methods of torture, but they are in fact therapies used in medicine. Willem van der Does writes about all of them in his new book. ‘Physicians…
-
3 October University: from Russian DNA to drug-related violence
In prehistoric times there was a huge wave of migration, from the steppes in Russia and Ukraine to West Europe. The newcomers’ genes began to dominate. Archaeology research in Leiden into burial mounds in the Veluwe and Utrechtse Heuvelrug areas of the Netherlands yielded this spectacular conclusion.…
-
No exams or lectures, but building a radio telescope with empty paint cans
No more lectures and exams for the Radio Astronomy course taught by Michiel Brentjens. The corona crisis is a moment of reflection that has changed his whole way of teaching. Instead of being in front of the class, he lets his students build a radio telescope with paint cans.
-
Late Ottoman Istanbul Meets Cinema: Social Impacts of the First Encounter
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Colonial and Global History Seminar
Lecture, COGLOSS
-
Today’s experimental quantum research at Leiden University: from the microscopic to the macroscopic
Lecture, Studium Generale
-
Psychology Connected: Academic Entrepreneurship
Conference
-
MODIFED: Morphosyntactic Dialect Feature Detection Workshop
Workshop
-
Panel discussion Bias in AI, algorithms, and the tech sector - Young Alumni Network
Alumni event
-
Where is the Caribbean in the Dutch WPS National Action Plan?
Lecture
-
LUCIR/Grotius Centre roundtable: Preventing ‘repeat mistakes’ in war
Lecture
-
Is the WPS Agenda Working? Preventing Conflict Related Sexual Violence and Beyond
Round Table
-
Frontlines of protection: Thinking and defining protection against disasters in times of environmental disruptions
Workshop
-
Lancering The Hague Global Futures Hub
Conference
-
Nederland en zijn veteranen 1945-2015
PhD defence
-
Photo exhibition 'People of Leiden'
Arts and culture, Fototentoonstelling