Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Field
-
suitably qualified candidates for a number of different full-time funded PhD scholarships based at different universities across New Zealand, to start before 31st December 2025. Successful candidates will
-
creative Ability and willingness to work collaboratively in a team, including with people of different nationality, religion, gender and ethnicity Demonstrated experience in planning, overseeing and
-
thinking and quantitative analysis Ability to work independently, to take initiative and be creative Ability and willingness to work collaboratively in a team, including with people of different nationality
-
different actors with diverging interests shape the debate over journalism and technology, the project scrutinizes their competing norms and values concerning journalism and technology. By critically
-
, negotiation, and normalization of new technologies. As different actors with diverging interests shape the debate over journalism and technology, the project scrutinizes their competing norms and values
-
nanophotonics, and mesoscopic physics, possibly combinations of the above. The positions are funded by POLIMA DNRF funding, and the students will be supervised by Professor Christos Tserkezis and Professor Joel D
-
delegation of the director of REQUIMTE), Professor Doctor Clara Isabel Barbosa Rodrigues Pereira (Assistant Professor of Faculty of Sciences of Porto University, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry) and
-
, single-molecule techniques, and optical imaging is welcomed. We foster diversity and female candidates are particularly invited to apply, since the gender balance recently declined with the departure
-
@plymouth.ac.uk ,) 3rd Supervisor: TBC Applications are invited for a three-year PhD studentship available at Professor Dr Edgar Kramers’ group, Peninsula Medical School, University of Plymouth, UK. This full-time
-
datasets, and large-scale statistical studies comparing different methods. The successful candidate will be jointly supervised by: Dr Edward Gillman (https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/physics/people