12 phd-control-engineering Fellowship positions at UNIVERSITY OF MELBOURNE in Australia
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reports to share research outcomes. You may be a great fit if: You are an experienced researcher with a PhD in water resources engineering or a related field, demonstrating expertise in decarbonising
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reports to share research outcomes. You may be a great fit if: You are an experienced researcher with a PhD in water resources engineering or a related field, demonstrating expertise in decarbonising
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for microbial analysis. You'll have the opportunity to work with cutting-edge mass spectrometry technology, develop semi-automated workflows, and collaborate with leading researchers across multiple Australian
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academic at the Faculty of Arts You may be a great fit if: You are a passionate researcher with a PhD and a background in Social Studies of Technology, Anthropology, Human-Computer Interaction or related
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to writing competitive grant proposals and funding applications. Mentor and Supervise: Guide Honours, Masters, and PhD students, as well as early career researchers. Collaborate and Communicate: Work with
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. Engage with Stakeholders: Build and maintain relationships with farmers, advisors, technology companies, agricultural economists and water managers throughout the Murray Darling Basin. Push Innovation
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Awarded Phd in social science related to agriculture, environmental science or cultural and natural resource management. Demonstrated experience in working with stakeholders such as farmers, farm advisors
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transitions and agricultural extension and advisory systems. You may be a great fit if: You are a passionate social scientist with a PhD in agriculture, environmental science, or cultural and natural resource
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Position Number: 0065842 Location: Parkville Role type: Part-time (0.5 FTE); Fixed-term till December 2027 Faculty: Melbourne Law School Salary: Level A - $83,468 – $113,262 p.a. plus 17% super (PhD
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– $113,262 p.a. plus 17% super (PhD entry level $105,518 p.a.) Join a cross-disciplinary team investigating the relationship between bacteria and dinoflagellate algae, critical to coral reef health Work across