Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
-
Field
-
Mental Health Services (SPMHS), James Street, Dublin 8. The purpose of the project is to link SPMHS with The Trinity Centre for Practice & Healthcare Innovation (TCPHI) in Trinity College Dublin to support
-
outstanding education are interlinked and equally valued. We are seeking a postdoctoral researcher to work in the role of a chapter scientist for the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Special Report on
-
to meet future challenges. Salary: Postdoctoral Researcher salary scale €46,305 - €59,063 per annum, (subject to the project’s funding limitations), and pro rata for shorter and/or part-time contracts
-
, teamwork, management and project work and transversal skills. The project also will give students the opportunity to experience a real-work environment through virtual training and engagement with enterprise
-
Enhanced Collective Intelligence). The appointment is a specific purpose contract, to commence on 1st September 2025 or shortly thereafter. The successful candidate will have a background in Computer
-
), analysis, and dissemination. The role also involves contributing to grant writing, reporting, publications, and supporting related work packages and research activity. The Post-Doctoral Researcher will
-
protection experts, health system, and public health, as innovators to develop a multi-purpose registry that simultaneously serves population monitoring and management, clinical and patient decision-making
-
the Medical Mycology Unit, Department of Biology, Maynooth University working under the supervision of Prof. Kevin Kavanagh. The position is for 12 months and will commence on 1st October 2025. The primary role
-
36 Months, Fixed-Term, Whole-Time Post Position Summary Applications are invited for the role of Senior Post-Doctoral Researcher within the Food Packaging and Material Sciences Group at the School
-
on the use of new and innovative strategies, aimed at boosting the host response, increasing antibiotic efficacy and decreasing our reliance on antibiotics in the clinic. Further details of Prof. Joe Keane’s