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and social data with the aim to better understand energy use. The programme is an interdisciplinary collaboration between the School of Geography and the Environment (Oxford), the Department
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applications. In this role, you will take the lead on an independent project within our broader research programme. Your work will centre on identifying and characterising novel regulators of the immune response
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central eighteenth-century areas of concern such as campaigns for the abolition of the slave trade or early forms of constitutionalism. The Postdoctoral Researcher will also assist with a programme of
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will possess sufficient specialist knowledge in the discipline to work within established research programmes as well as the ability to manage own academic research and associated activities. You will
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collaboratively with the Health Systems Collaborative at University of Oxford and the KEMRI-Wellcome Trust Research Programme (KWTRP) in Kenya. As a Postdoctoral Researcher, you will bring theoretical and practical
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particle physics. Previous experience of LHCb simulation development, testbeam operations or detector commissioning would be advantageous. Candidates are expected to demonstrate the ability to plan and
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optimising protocols, designing and accurately executing experiments, and contributing conceptually to the overall research programme. Good organisational and communication skills and the ability to work as
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submit a statement of interest describing your previous experiences that shaped your scientific interests and how you plan to use this opportunity to advance your own career, as well as contributions
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the initiative, they will also work closely with other researchers within the Sheppard/Maiden Labs and the IOI, to integrate their work within the broader research programme. With excellent
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. The advances made will contribute to our active existing research programme in which utilises THz technologies for optical-pump-terahertz-probe experiments to extract mobility values of semiconductors. The role