2,363 search results for “south anna” in the Public website
-
Manufactured drought? An environmental history of water scarcity in Colonial Kenya, 1895-1952
Lecture, PCNI Research Seminar
-
CPP Colloquium: A Tale of Two Crises. Or, Where is the Political Philosophy of the Biodiversity Crisis?
Lecture
-
Transforming Caste: Circus and Body Politics in Colonial Malabar
Lecture, COGLOSS
-
Sweden in NATO and the changing EU security architecture
Lecture, European Union Seminar
- What's New?! Fall Lecture Series 2023
-
VVIK Lecture | Uncovering the Manuscript History of the Śrīkaṇṭhacarita: Tracing and Reconstruction
Lecture, VVIK Lecture
- Science and 'inequality': insights from Africa and environmental fields
-
The two tiers of noun incorporation in Iraqw
Lecture, Descriptive Linguistics Seminars
-
Publish or Perish: Religious Zaydi publishers in Yemen during the 1990s
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Seminar and book discussion
Lecture, Seminar and book discussion
-
Family, a racialized space
Lecture, Sociolinguistics & Discourse Studies Series
-
Image - Infrastructure. A visual ethnography of the Port of Suape (Brazil)
Lecture
- Volume 14 (2019)
-
In the Making #2: Etienne Kallos, Searching for a Diasporic Time Image
Lecture
-
Of Monsters and other Men: green Islam and the tidalectics of ecological crises in maritime Asia
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
Warrior Women, Gender-bending Plots, Perfect Masculinity: Paradigms of gender in Javanese Amir Hamza narratives
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
PCNI Research Seminar on Political Meetings
Lecture, PCNI Research Seminar
-
Text Matter: The Material and Political Lives of Javanese Manuscripts
Lecture, LIAS Lunch Talk Series
-
Is Universal Jurisdiction Becoming more Universal? Taking Stock of Contemporary Practices
Conference
-
To Counter or Not Counter Violent Extremism? That’s the Question
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
LIMS talk
Lecture, LIMS seminar
-
Textual Sources and Geographies of Slavery in the Early Islamic Empire, ca. 600-1000 CE
Conference
-
SAILS Lunch Time Seminar
Lecture
-
Renaming Ambiguity: Modernist Dream Encounters in Islamic Indonesia
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Family as a language policy regime: power, agency and negotiations at home
Lecture, Sociolinguistics series
-
Manifesting Minutes and Mapping Cosmographies: Time and Place in Early Modern Deccan
Lecture, Annual Leiden Terra Incognita Lecture
-
Watañi lāntaṃ
PhD defence
-
Applied Probability Conference
Conference
-
ASCL Seminar: Roadblock Politics - Predation and Resistance in Central Africa
Lecture
-
Leiden University Nationalism Network
Lecture, Leiden University Nationalism Network
-
Special Guest Lecture: Civilian Internment in India: Omissions and Exceptions, Incarceration camps of the Pacific War
Guest Lecture | SSEALS
-
Dies Natalis for alumni 2022
Alumni event
-
‘The memory of persecution is in our blood’: documenting loyalties, identities and motivations to political action in the Ugandan Pentecostal
Lecture
-
A grammar of Ashéninka
PhD defence
-
Roots, branches and LHEAf
Conference, Final conference
-
Leiden University Nationalism Network
Lecture, Leiden University Nationalism Network
- Volume 4 (2009)
-
Book series
Diplomatic Studies (DIST) is a peer-reviewed book series that encourages original work on the theory and practice, processes and outcomes of diplomacy.
-
CCLS Past Events
On this page you can find information about previous CCLS events.
-
Project Office IRP
Programme management of research programme “Strengthening knowledge of and dialogue with the Islamic/Arab world”
-
Tales of the Revolt. Memory, Oblivion and Identity in the Low Countries, 1566-1700
This research project, that started in September 2008, aims to explore how personal and public memories of the Dutch Revolt in the seventeenth century evolved and interacted to create new political and cultural identities for the societies that eventually were to become the kingdoms of the Netherlands…
-
Text in Context
Recontextualising the Papyri from Roman Soknopaiou Nesos / Dimê (Fayyum, Egypt)
-
Engaging Europe in the Arab World: European missionaries and humanitarianism in the Middle East (1850-1970)
From the mid-19th century until the 1970’s, the Middle East witnessed the presence of various European missionaries who played a fundamental role in the birth and the development of humanitarianism. Since these Christian missionaries were well integrated in the local Middle Eastern societies via their…
-
Educational Innovation Hub
Since its founding, LUC has been a college of educational development and experimentation. Its mission statement identifies the college as “a site of innovation in pedagogy, curriculum design, and student well-being,” and it applies a student-centred approach to learning throughout its BA and BSc degree…
-
Books for Review
The Hague Journal of Diplomacy regularly publishes book reviews of approx. 800-1000 words, upon invitation by our Book Reviews Editor. We are currently accepting reviews of the selected books below, as well as any other contribution within the field of diplomacy and global affairs.
-
Campus The Hague: more ‘Hague’ in its DNA
Campus The Hague has forged its own identity: alongside interdisciplinarity, interaction with the city is its defining feature. ‘The campus is now a young adult. It is well beyond puberty,’ says campus chair Erwin Muller. An ambitious new strategy reveals this.
-
The recent IPCC report: some reactions from our Liveable planet community
The publication of the recent IPCC report on climate change has not gone unnoticed, to put it mildly, certainly not within the Liveable Planet community.
-
No legal career but a food truck on Bonaire instead
If you study law, you won’t necessarily end up striding round a law firm in tailor-made suits. Alumnus Harrie Schoffelen certainly hasn’t: he made the conscious decision to follow another path in life. Together with his fiancée he runs a successful food truck on the tropical island of Bonaire. ‘Return…
-
The colour purple: why it's important to our new Dean
During the New Year's Reception at FSW, new Dean Sarah de Rijcke gave her maiden speech. The first official moment at which she's able to share what she stands for and what to expect of her. In case you weren't there, or you want to read the speech at your own pace, below you can find the integral copy…
-
Sustainable growth: a continuous balancing act for the FGGA Board
Erwin Muller, Dean of FGGA and Administrator of Campus The Hague, and Koen Caminada, Vice-Dean, share their thoughts on how ‘we’ as a faculty are doing based on three themes. A discussion about the balancing act between what is and what isn’t possible and the natural urge to continue to grow, the utility…