Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Employer
-
Field
-
forms from land via inland waters to sea. You will synthesise, test, and use the reported methane kinetics from labs and culture experiments to construct the model using Python programming language. You
-
English. There is a strong preference for candidates that also are able to speak Dutch (or have a demonstrated willingness to learn this language). You have the ability to work independently and in a team
-
public audiences and taking part in a pilot programme where experience can be acquired in high school science teaching; use graph theoretical tools to develop new fundamental frameworks and analytic tools
-
and MSc education, result of an English test (if you attended a non-English taught MSc program), a publication list (if applicable) and contact details of two referees. Since only three documents can be
-
and eager to learn. In our international working environment there is an increasing amount of communication in English. For this position it is about language level C1. In case you don't speak Dutch
-
-for-Good, the municipality of Emmen, NOM, InvestNL, and other academic and regional stakeholders. The PhD position will be embedded within the research programme Global Economics & Management at the Faculty
-
will be embedded within the research programme Marketing at the Faculty of Economics and Business (FEB). The project will be supervised by Marijke Leliveld and Kim Poldner. The ideal candidate is highly
-
, in vitro transcription, northern blotting, etc.). Knowledge of UNIX/Linux computing environments and of a programming language (e.g., Perl, Python, Rust, C++, R, etc.). We offer you in accordance with
-
supporting the clinical programme in all activities related to the in vitro production and preservation of equine embryos (ovum pick-up, oocyte maturation, intracytoplasmic sperm injection, IVF, embryo culture
-
and AMOC changes at decadal to millennial timescales. This project may include participation in seagoing expeditions. This project is part of the 10-year EMBRACER research programme funded by the Dutch