130 parallel-programming-"Multiple"-"Simons-Foundation" positions at University of London
Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Program
-
Field
-
senior member of the Strategic Planning team, you will work to ensure the University can respond to, implement and plan for changes in Policy affecting higher education. In particular, you will take the
-
health researcher is sought with expertise in quantitative surveys, mathematical modeling in nutrition (especially in Sudan), and crisis clinical nutrition program management. The ideal candidate should
-
to improve people's health in developing countries by striving for excellence in research, healthcare, and training. Our research program spans basic scientific research, clinical studies, epidemiological
-
. Provide full customer service to all applicants including advising and guiding candidates through the admissions process, positively influencing their views of our Programme and School. Arranging interviews
-
assist with the delivery of teaching across the programme and will have the opportunity to co-lead a module. You will also assist with assessment and student support duties. The post holder will be
-
programme. About the CoSTAR National Lab : The CoSTAR National Lab is the largest ever investment in creative industries R&D by UKRI. A £51.1m programme led by Royal Holloway, University of London to develop
-
About the Role The purpose of this role is to provide qualitative and quantitative research support for a research and impact programme on food reformulation. This role sits within the Research and
-
groups in the areas of Intelligent Systems, Machine Learning, Algorithms and Complexity, and Programming Languages and Systems. The Department has also made recent appointments in Quantum Computing and
-
for a '100% paid' prior to a programme start date. You will regularly run outstanding payment reports to ensure outstanding debts are paid, minimising the open debt by clearing 100% of unpaid invoices
-
About the Role This role will involve undertaking the evaluation of a digital social intervention in primary care in England. A summary of the programme grant is found here. The individual will be