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matter, that is, the emergent behavior of living materials that can move independently. We will incorporate multi-body interactions such as cell volume energy terms as hypergraphs and higher-order external
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PhD Position: Activating Heritage as a Mediator for Dialogue and Belonging in an Era of Polarization
sustainability in society and active agents shaping narratives By collaborating with heritage sites and the resources of cultural institutions, leveraging their collections, material culture, and local stories as
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to appropriately respond. The PhD project will take a unique, multi-method, and longitudinal approach. The basis for the PhD project will be a longitudinal cohort-study, where three groups of youth (starting ages 10
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, stakeholder alignment, and innovative business models that promote multi-value creation. You will investigate how long-term visions and transition paths can be shaped with partners, how startups and SMEs can be
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of vaccines and antiviral agents. These studies often involve interdisciplinary collaboration combining virological, veterinary, pathological, and immunological expertise. Your tasks will include: • Preparing
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)national network of collaborators, while working in an ambitious, motivated, multi-disciplinary team of veterinarians, clinicians, material scientists, biologists, and engineers. These technologies
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accelerates renovations through repeated, standardized processes to ultimately save costs, time and resources. The Challenge As a PhD candidate responsible for developing a multi-layered governance framework
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and leading multi-stakeholder groups to develop and implementing European or global sustainability standards. You will be working in the expertise group Sustainable Value Chains, one of twelve expertise
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climate buffers and their contribution to multi-functional landscapes. More specifically, the PhD project will focus on the following research questions: Do freshwater wetlands contribute to net
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-waiting – were successful spies in seventeenth-century England. This is what Nadine Akkerman describes in her book Invisible Agents, the first analysis of the role of female spies in the seventeenth century