1,302 search results for “worked s history” in the Student website
-
Bachelor's Graduation Ceremony Archaeology
Graduation Ceremony
-
Forecasting Finlandization: How will Xi’s China seek to revise East Asia’s regional order?
Lecture
-
How cells determine the fate of proteins (and can we do it too?)
Cells in our bodies are often threatened by errors in our own proteins. The FLOW consortium, comprising scientists from various institutions including Leiden, is poised to meticulously map out for the first time how cells control proteins, correcting or removing faulty ones. This endeavour holds promise…
-
Global Challenges: The Regime of Lukashenka
Lecture
-
Plato's Myths: Tools for Thinking Conference
Conference
-
Asia Academy #09: India's Democracy
Lecture
-
LKV's Art Auction
Festival
-
'It’s the complexity of this group of patients that makes the challenge of improving their quality of life so interesting’
Dialysis patients experience a range of physical and mental symptoms that interact and influence each otherIn her doctoral research, psychologist Judith Tommel wanted to find the optimum approach to help these dialysis patients improve their quality of life. ‘We need to make sure we avoid excluding…
-
Access to Justice in Today’s Libya
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Frontiers of Children's Rights Summer School
Course
-
It's not even a state: The story of Putin's obsession with Ukraine
Lecture
-
New Year's Reception Faculty of Science
Conference
-
Andrew Gawthorpe in The Guardian about the Republicans’ more radical agenda
University lecturer Andrew Gawthorpe argues in The Guardian that the Republican's new agenda for a second Trump term is more radical than the first. He says that they seek to take control of federal agencies by replacing civil servants with ‘American First footsoldiers’.
-
The future of Europe’s finances
Lecture, European Union Seminar
-
New Year's Reception Faculty of Science
Conference
-
Asia Academy #15: North Korea's Gamble
Lecture, LAC Asia Academy
-
ASCL Seminar: Africa's Second Struggle for Freedom: What's decolonisation got to do with it?
Lecture
-
Live Event: China’s Digital Future
Debate
-
Asia Academy #06: Taiwan's Future
Lecture
-
LUCDH Lunchtime Speaker Series: What Use are Networks Anyway?
Lecture
-
10th Stephen Ellis Annual Lecture: Season of Rains, Africa in the World Today
Lecture
-
What's Next? - Alumni in Tech
Lecture
-
‘Try to connect with as many people as possible during your internship’
Micah DenBraber studied at Leiden University College in The Hague while pursuing an internship at the World Resources Institute (WRI), a self-proclaimed ‘think-and-do-tank’, where he built partnerships with the philanthropic sector, among other things.
-
Conflict Escalation: Explaining the Rise of Violence
Lecture
-
What Trump’s Return Means for Europe
Debate, Roundtable
-
Remarkable PhD research: diagnosing sepsis in premature babies
How can we diagnose the life-threatening condition sepsis in premature babies as quickly and accurately as possible? That is what PhD student Manchu Thangavelu from the Leiden Academic Centre for Drug Research (LACDR) wants to figure out.
-
Today’s geopolitics: Managing the known unknowns?
Lecture, Seminar
-
Asian(s) in the Netherlands
Panel conversation
-
International Women's Day 2023 @ Wijnhaven
Conference
-
EU’s engagement in the Arctic
Lecture, Seminar
-
Camila Paz Espinoza Chaparro
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
Olga Lundysheva
Faculty of Humanities
-
Myrthe Veenman
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
Ammar Allami
Faculty Governance and Global Affairs
-
Meng Li
Science
-
Rik Lettany
Faculteit Archeologie
-
Matthew Sung
Faculty of Humanities
-
David de Buisonjé
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
ALFA New Year’s lecture and drinks
Alumni event, Alumni Association of Archaeology presents:
-
The Global Future(s) of Europe
Inaugural lecture
-
Defending Nature’s Rights: Paradoxes and Challenges
Masterclass
-
Celebrating Language: WDO's 19th Lustrum Symposium
Festival, Lustrum Symposium
-
Leiden students advise the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child
On Wednesday 18 May, the students of the LL.M. Advanced Studies in International Children’s Rights presented their work to the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child with the aim to provide recommendations on how to make its decision more accessible to children.
- Presentation of Jaap Doek Children's Rights Thesis Prize
-
Literature as Commons: Re-reading Natsume Sōseki's Kokoro
Lecture
-
Who's Watching Brussels? Why the EU deserves better watchdogs
Lecture, European Union Seminar
-
Online Information Session U.S. Business Law Academy
Lecture
-
The EU’s “Geopolitical Awakening”: Beyond Trade and Defence
Public Panel
-
Asia Academy #11: South Korea's Chip Power
Lecture, LAC Asia Academy
-
Child rights expert sounds the alarm: ‘Global crises are hitting children hardest’
Wars, climate change and the effects of covid have caused a global decline in children’s well-being. In her inaugural lecture Ann Skelton, Professor of Children’s Rights in a Sustainable World, points to the disastrous effects of multiple interacting crises.