Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
The Department of Biomedicine and Department of Chemistry, University of Basel, Switzerland, invite qualified candidates to apply for a position as PhD in Chemistry / Chemical Biology / Medicinal
-
plant breeding technologies funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation as part of the National Research Program NRP84. The project draws from a planetary health ethics approach to investigate ethical
-
industry, NGOs, and scientists from plant biology and public health. The PhD candidate with closely collaborate with a Postdoc working on the project. Starting date/length of PhD program: At the earliest
-
? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description The Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Basel is
-
. The graduate programme is internationally recognized and presents inter-university collaboration. As a PhD candidate, you will be part of a lively and active research community located in the upper Rhine region
-
of implantable device technologies, such as pacemakers or neural implants, funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation as part of the National Research Program NRP83. The goal of the project is to identify
-
plant breeding technologies funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation as part of the National Research Program NRP84. The project draws from a planetary health ethics approach to investigate ethical
-
the field of cell biology, biochemistry, pharmacology, and computational chemistry. Writing of scientific publications, patents and a PhD thesis. Supervision of interns, master students students. Follow
-
on the ethical and social implications of implantable device technologies, such as pacemakers or neural implants, funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation as part of the National Research Program NRP83
-
structural bioinformatics, computational biology, or a related field, with at least two years of postdoctoral experience and a strong publication record. Applications from fresh PhD graduates may only be