Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
PhD Position: Activating Heritage as a Mediator for Dialogue and Belonging in an Era of Polarization
relevance. This PhD project combines locally grounded research in the Frisian context with strong international academic exchange. It offers the opportunity to work closely with regional stakeholders while
-
Mecsnóber and Dr Ann Hoag in the Modern English Literature chair group, the successful candidate will develop their own focus within the parameters of the project. Broader interdisciplinary context and
-
in the political context, potentially discouraging them from pursuing public careers. This is a particular concern given that women are underrepresented in prominent political positions, holding head
-
approach contributes to a better understanding of how disinformation campaigns target women in the political context, potentially discouraging them from pursuing public careers. This is a particular concern
-
, the successful candidate will develop their own focus within the parameters of the project. Broader interdisciplinary context and expertise will be provided through the SAPIENS research group of the Groningen
-
critical literacy skills to evaluate news in the context of algorithmic personalization and GenAI. It brings together expertise on media and journalism studies, digital literacy and inclusion, argumentation
-
, the Dutch policy context and the two policy cases under study. Key skills that the candidate will be developing and working with are: - advanced quantitative data analyses; - simulation modelling
-
Organisation Job description We are advertising a 4 year PhD position within the context of the Horizon-Widera EXCOSM project on Galaxies and the Cosmic Web. The position is a dual-degree position
-
understanding of the decision-making process of street-level workers. This PhD project ‘ICONIC’ (‘International Comparative research Of street-level decisions in superdiverse Neighbourhoods In Context’) funded by
-
In Context’) funded by the Dutch Research Council (NWO Vidi grant) and led by dr. Mark van Ostaijen, will comparatively study street-level decisions in superdiverse neighbourhoods and investigate