783 search results for “2 de 29kolonisatie” in the Student website
- Livestream diploma-uitreiking Msc Biology (sessie 2)
-
Breinfestival ‘Over de kop’ - Hanneke Hulst
Festival, Publieksevenement
-
Thesis Week 2 & 6 May - Campus The Hague
Study support
-
Double book launch Radhika Gupta and Erik de Maaker
Festival, Book launch
-
CADS Spotlight: Tim van de Meerendonk & Esther van der Camp
Lecture, Research Seminar
-
Peak movement in afternoon and evening linked to lower risk of diabetes
People who move most in the afternoon and evening are less insulin resistant than people who move mainly in the morning or spread throughout the day. This makes them at lower risk of type 2 diabetes. These are the results that researchers from the Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) have published…
-
Two-day workshop Skinner Releasing Technique (SRT)™ 2
Arts and leisure, Arts and leisure
-
Onzekerheid beïnvloed - de rol van emoties tijdens conflicten en strafbepaling
Lecture
-
Karwan Fatah-Black launches book series on slavery and emancipation
How do we account for historical power dynamics when writing new histories of slavery and emancipation? What critical methods can we employ when studying preserved archives and collections? A new book series aims to address these questions. The initiators Karwan Fatah-Black and Ilse Josepha Lazaroms…
-
De toekomstige vorst? Wilhelm Heinrich von Brandenburg (1648-1649)
Lecture, Research Seminar Europe 1000-1800
-
Illuminating the Journey of Diego de Ocaña, O. S. H.
Lecture, Research Seminar Europe 1000-1800
-
Green Friday in de Hortus
Green Friday
-
Raising the colonial debate: ‘You have to create a story that’s easy to understand’
How can we best tell the current generations about some of the darkest parts of our past? To answer this question, researchers from Leiden are working with the Gedeeld Verleden, Gezamenlijke Toekomst foundation on public programmes about the Dutch history of slavery.
-
Het wonen (als bouwen) ontstond pas zeer laat in de menselijke geschiedenis
Lecture
-
“De” outside the cleft: An evidential operator in the C domain
Lecture, CHiLL series
-
The ambiguity of the post-verbal modal morpheme DE in Sichuanese
Lecture, CHiLL series
-
I’m afraid it’s rather bad news | Debate in De Balie + livestream
Debate
-
Opening tentoonstelling 'Crafting Cultures' in de oude UB
Exhibition
-
Film night: 'Une femme est une femme' (1961) with passion talk by Sylvie de Leeuwe
Lecture + film screening
-
Lecture Series | Metabolic trajectories before the diagnosis of type 2 diabetes
Lecture, Lecture part of a series
-
EA & SSEA Night Talk 2 – Technology in East Asia from Manufacturing to Research & Development?
Lecture
-
Decolonisation in art: 'That darkness says: up to here and no further'
It was not light, but its absence that caught Stephanie Noach's attention a few years ago. With her research on darkness in art, she aims to show how darkness can question and sometimes even undermine colonial imagery.
-
Peter Meel
Faculty of Humanities
-
Op weg naar de NAVO top
Lecture
-
Van de Waallezing 2023: Maarten van Heemskerck, Rome and classical mythology
Alumni event, Lezing
-
Van de Waal Lecture 2022: Futurism and Europe: The aesthetics of a new world
Alumni event, Lecture
-
Lecture: Inside Gang Governance: How and Why Gangs Rule the Streets of Rio de Janeiro
Lecture
-
Van de Waal Lecture 2024 - Barkcloth: wrapping people, places and ideas
Alumni event, Lecture
-
Dutch armed forces were willing to accept high casualties in Indonesia
The decolonisation war in Indonesia was violent partly because the Dutch military operated on the conviction that ‘an uprising had to be forcibly suppressed.’ This what historian Christiaan Harinck from the KITLV discovered in his PhD research.
-
democratic reformism or "market authoritarianism"? The case of the Instituto de Capacitación e Investigación en Reforma Agraria ICIRA in Chile 1960-
Lecture
-
Anja Zonneveld
PLATO
-
Céline Zaepffel
Faculty of Humanities
-
From Modern Marvel to Environmental Tragedy: Grant for Research into Polluted Mines in Africa
At one time, the railway from Kimberley to Kambove in Southern Africa symbolised prosperity and progress. Today, the exhausted mining towns along its route are marked by decay and pollution. Professor Jan-Bart Gewald has been awarded an NWO L grant to investigate the long-term global consequences.