42 programming-"Multiple"-"U"-"Prof"-"FEMTO-ST-institute"-"St" positions at University of Oxford
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of Years 1 and 2 of the Graduate-entry Medicine programme. This will include organising teaching for Graduate-entry medical students, assembling course timetables, making arrangements for incoming students
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be found on our jobs page . About the Role As the Executive Programmes team at the Blavatnik School of Government continues to grow, it has been restructured into three key pillars: Programme Delivery
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individual who can be our next University Engagement Lead in Ashmolean Museum. In this role, you will develop, budget, deliver and evaluate an ambitious, exciting and audience-focused programme of engagement
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a wide variety of tasks, to work effectively under pressure, prioritise workload and meet multiple deadlines. • The ability to use initiative and to be proactive in solving problems, either by
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. This position is part of the expanding OCTRU programming team, that ensures trial programming provision enables and proactively supports excellent research with high quality fully validated systems. On receipt
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surveys, early universe and gravitational physics. Good programming experience, an enthusiasm for coding and data analysis, and the ability to work in a large collaboration, are particularly relevant
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-antigen triggers of regulatory T cells in the context of Multiple Sclerosis (MS). This position is part of a large multidisciplinary collaboration between the University of Oxford, University of Cambridge
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this, the People and Finance Service Transformation (PFST) Programme is driving significant change, and talent acquisition is at the heart of that transformation. What We Offer 38 days of annual leave (inclusive of
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organisations? Join the Transforming Oxford’s Digital Communications Programme, based in the IT Services team at the University of Oxford, and help shape how digital communications are delivered across our world
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debilitating chronic pain in the population, often associated with conditions such as cancer, arthritis and stroke. The programme brings together multiple research teams working across Oxford, Cambridge, UCL and