Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description The Behavioural Science Institute (BSI) Graduate School offers four PhD positions on the theme Empowering
-
provides education to 6,000 students and employs 700 staff. Education is organised into six programme clusters: Psychology; Artificial Intelligence; Pedagogical Sciences and Educational Sciences
-
historical trauma. Apply now for this PhD position! Sites of traumatic experiences become traumascapes through the collective memory and identity formation processes that develop around them over time
-
Mathematics Department as a PhD candidate and explore cutting‑edge invariants of singular foliations, working with advanced tools like groupoids, cyclic cohomology, C*-algebras and K‑theory. The Department
-
and several social partners and educational partners in an eight-year programme to realise a major breakthrough aimed at creating a sustainably employable workforce. In a total of four work packages, we
-
qualitative data to study how parents’ social network connections and resources shape their children’s career outcomes. As a PhD candidate, you will work on your own project within the SHINE programme. The aim
-
curiosity‑driven research and medieval literature? For the ERC project CONSENT, you will study the theme of sexual consent in medieval European narrative songs. As a PhD candidate you will conduct
-
education to 6,000 students and employs 700 staff. Education is organised into six programme clusters: Psychology; Artificial Intelligence; Pedagogical Sciences and Educational Sciences; Communication Science
-
to collaborate with and supervise Bachelor and Master’s students. Would you like to learn more about what it’s like to pursue a PhD at Radboud University? Visit the page about working as a PhD candidate . Where to
-
Programme? Not funded by a EU programme Is the Job related to staff position within a Research Infrastructure? No Offer Description Join our PhD project exploring how polarised factual beliefs shape public