1,334 search results for “human jurnal ilias ilmu-ilmu humaniora” in the Public website
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    Corry Donner on her retirement: 'I’ll definitely miss the intellectual stimulation, but what I want most now is to get out of my head.'
        
    
As Board Secretary, Corry Donner aims to be a ‘spider in the web’; someone who keeps a watchful eye on and brings together all the different perspectives of the institute’s board. Now she's left her carefully woven web at the university and transfer her tasks to her successor. Last September, we talked…
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    LCHP workshop Iamblichus on the Cosmos, the Human Soul and Theurgy
    
    
Debate
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    Leiden Law School and the Mexican Supreme Court strengthen collaboration
        
    
Leiden Law School and the Center for Constitutional Studies of the Mexican Supreme Court (CEC-SCJN) have signed a memorandum of understanding, to carry out joint activities in the field of constitutional law and children's rights.
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    2 new Veni-grants: investigating malaria in the Middle Ages and coinage in Rome
        
    
Two researchers at the Faculty of Archaeology have received a Veni award from the Netherlands Organisation for Academic Research (NWO). This award offers promising young researchers the opportunity to further develop their ideas for a period of three years.
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    Testing of a malaria vaccine gets the green light
        
    
Researchers at Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC) and Radboud university medical center have been given the green light to deliberately infect volunteers with malaria in order to test a highly promising vaccine on them.
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    on the Status of Women CSW: Over 75 years of making women’s rights human rights
    
    
Lecture, INVISIHIST event
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    Dr. Amy Strecker receives Global Interactions BREED Grant
        
    
Dr Amy Strecker (Heritage Dept., Faculty of Archaeology) has recently been awarded a LGI BREED grant to develop her project on property and spatial justice in international law. Building on her previous research into landscape protection from cultural heritage, environmental and human rights perspectives…
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    ECtHR Judge Ledi Bianku speaks in the European Seminars Lecture Series
        
    
On 25 October 2017, Ledi Bianku, judge at the European Court of Human Rights, gave a guest lecture entitled “The ECHR and asylum”. Ledi Bianku is Judge at the European Court of Human Rights since 1 February 2008. He has held the position of Vice-President of Section I of the Court from January 2016…
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    From Modern Marvel to Environmental Tragedy: Grant for Research into Polluted Mines in Africa
        
    
At one time, the railway from Kimberley to Kambove in Southern Africa symbolised prosperity and progress. Today, the exhausted mining towns along its route are marked by decay and pollution. Professor Jan-Bart Gewald has been awarded an NWO L grant to investigate the long-term global consequences.
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    ‘Leiden could raise its profile as an AI expert’
        
    
‘In the field of AI, Leiden is still a relatively unseen university,’ says Thomas Dohmen. The brand-new Director AI Collaboration Center, would like to forge a Leiden AI collaboration network, with sustainable and impactful relationships between the university and civil society organisations. The question…
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    ‘The ancient Egyptians were concerned with more than just death’
        
    
When we think about ancient Egypt, the first things that come to mind are usually mummies and sarcophagi. According to researcher and Rijksmuseum van Oudheden curator Lara Weiss, that impression is unjustified. She made an audio tour for the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden that focuses on living Egyptians…
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    Herta Mohr: Headstrong female scientist in a man's world
        
    
As a twelve-year-old girl, Nicky van de Beek became intrigued by the tomb chapels in Saqqara, Egypt. Now she is doing her PhD on them, just like another Leiden Egyptologist decades earlier. Herta Mohr persevered with her research during World War II. Now she is the namesake of the first Leiden building…
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    Anne Marieke van der Wal-Rémy: ‘The Instagram influencer should also be preserved as a historical source’
        
    
Anne Marieke van der Wal-Rémy, assistant professor of African History and International Studies, has received a Comenius Teaching Fellow grant of 50,000 euros. She intends to use the grant to set up an online archive of digital primary sources, together with her students. Van der Wal-Rémy: ‘ “Once on…
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    Archaeologist Alejandra Roche Recinos investigates ancient immigration in Southern Guatemala
        
    
In June 2024 the Faculty of Archaeology welcomed a new Assistant Professor. Dr Alejandra Roche Recinos, originally from Guatemala, will strengthen the Faculty’s expertise on the archaeology of Central America. ‘I want to explore the lesser known archaeology of Southern Guatemala.’
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    ERC grant for Nathalie Brusgaard's investigation into complex relationship early farmers and wild animals
        
    
The European Research Council (ERC) has awarded a prestigious Starting Grant to Leiden archaeologist Dr Nathalie Brusgaard. With this €1.5 million grant, Brusgaard will investigate how the transition to farming in Western Europe affected the relationship between humans and wild animals. A theme that,…
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    Reconciling conflicting interests
        
    
A far-reaching understanding of human behaviour is necessary to get to grips with conflicts in society and to encourage parties to meet each other halfway. Psychologists, anthropologists and political scientists from Leiden are making invaluable contributions to that understanding. You can find out…
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    Book presentation 'Phanta Rhei: recht en duurzaamheid'
        
    
On 15 June 2023, the book presentation for the ‘Panta Rhei: recht en duurzaamheid’ (Panta Rhei: law and sustainability) was held at the Oude Sterrenwacht in Leiden. The book provides an overview of research in the field of sustainability conducted at Leiden Law School and was compiled by Yvonne Erkens,…
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    Call for Papers: The EU’s Reponse to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine: International and European Perspectives Conference
        
    
This conference is organised by the European Society for International Law Interest Group ‘EU as a Global Actor’, supported by the University of Leiden (Europa Institute, Europe hub, Ukraine hub), KU Leuven and City Law School, City, University of London. It will be held at the Leiden Law School on…
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    Flexible Relations: Experimentation and Innovation in Human-Environmental Links Across the Americas
    
    
Conference, RITMO Annual Meeting
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    Co-registration of eye movements and fixation-related potentials to study human cognition
    
    
Lecture, LACG Meetings
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    OSCoffee: Doing Open Science in the Humanities: From Public Discourse to Qualitative Data
    
    
Lecture
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    Leiden Translation Talk 9 May: Human-technology relations and the permeating presence of machine translation tools
    
    
Lecture
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    Human Trafficking and Piracy in Early Modern East Asia: Maritime Challenges to the Ming Dynasty Economy, 1370–1565
    
    
Lecture, China Seminar
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    Asylum seekers still sent back to Italy by IND
        
    
A recent ruling by the Dutch Council of State indicates that asylum seekers may no longer be sent back to Italy. The Council of State increasingly concludes that the countries at Europe's southern and eastern external borders expose migrants to degrading treatment. This in particular is a reason for…
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    Immigrants earn less than their Dutch colleagues
        
    
A recent study shows that immigrants in the Netherlands earn 15 per cent less on average than their colleagues without a migrant background. Olaf van Vliet, Professor of Economics, comments on this pay gap in ‘de Volkskrant’ newspaper.
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    Firefighting robots must be developed responsibly
        
    
As robotics advances in the field of emergency response, firefighting robots – or 'firebots' – offer promising improvements in safety and operational efficiency. However, to ensure these technologies truly benefit society, non-technological factors must be considered from the outset.
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    Singing parrots wanted: is our musicality unique?
        
    
Is our musicality unique? That’s what the Bird Singalong project aims to find out. And for that, they need the help of feathered friends from all around the world. ‘By researching how parrots learn songs, we also learn more about the origin of our own musicality.’ Do you have a parrot that can sing…
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    Authors' workshop: Research Handbook on Victims' Rights under International Law
        
    
From 29 to 30 October 2024, the Kalshoven-Gieskes Forum (KGF) and the Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies had the pleasure of hosting an inspiring authors’ workshop in The Hague for the forthcoming Research Handbook, Victims' Rights under Public International Law, edited by Dr Robert Heinsch…
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    Nederland heeft juridische plicht genocide te voorkomen
        
    
Nico Schrijver, voorzitter van het College voor de Rechten van de Mens en emeritus-hoogleraar internationaal recht, was te gast in Nieuwsuur over het dringend CRM advies met betrekking tot het Gaza-conflict. ‘Nederland is volgens het internationale recht verplicht om actief op te treden bij dreigende…
 - Open Science Week at the Faculty of Humanities: Let’s open up!
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    Osteoarchaeologist Maia Casna receives the NVFA Incentive Prize: ‘I try to push osteology into the public eye as much as I can’
        
    
PhD candidate Maia Casna received an Incentive Prize from the Dutch Association for Physical Anthropology (NVFA). She was rewarded this honor for her innovative research into respiratory diseases and her talent for presenting her results to both academic and general audiences. ‘It feels really nice…
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    Alumna Mojan Samadi: ‘Femicide is not about the perpetrator’s motive’
        
    
Mojan Samadi obtained her PhD in 2020 in Leiden and has since remained at the university as an assistant professor. Her research currently focuses on gender and criminal law, with a key question being how criminal law should address femicide.
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    LUCIP Colloquium "Humans as Heaven: Innaecheon 人乃天, and the Resilient Spirit of Korean Democracy and the Korean Wave"
    
    
Lecture
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    function of the dopaminergic midbrain - with a special focus on the human VTA
    
    
PhD defence
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    Postdoc Dita Auzina investigates relationship between appearance of monumentality and disruptive environmental events
        
    
In the spring of 2024 the Faculty of Archaeology welcomed a new postdoc. Dita Auzina, originally from Latvia, works as a researcher in the project of Alex Geurds. ‘I have joined the project as a landscape archaeologist, but I also run my own fieldwork in Nicaragua.’
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    Health psychologist Jos Brosschot professor by special appointment
        
    
Jos F. Brosschot has been appointed as a professor by special appointment on the chair ‘psychophysiological mechanisms of stress in daily life’. This chair has been created by the Foundation for Research into Psychosocial Stress.
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    Interfaculty cooperation at the intersection of cultural heritage and climate change
        
    
Dr Gül Aktürk Hauser (Assistant Professor, Department of Heritage and Society, Faculty of Archaeology) and Dr Sophie Starrenburg (Assistant Professor, Grotius Centre for International Legal Studies, Leiden Law School) organised a workshop titled ‘An Interdisciplinary Perspective on Heritage Reparations:…
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    DNA analysis of historical mosquitoes will help us understand malaria transmission
        
    
Researchers from Leiden University, McMaster University and Public Health Ontario are calling on colleagues to track down archival specimens of mosquitoes from museums and other collections and to examine them with modern methods. This will tell them more about malaria transmission.
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    A quick call about the war in Ukraine: ‘Did Putin underestimate his opponent?’
        
    
The war in Ukraine has lasted almost two weeks now. What does Putin expect to achieve with his invasion and how big is the chance that the West will get involved? We phoned André Gerrits, professor and expert on Russia.
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    Melanie Fink speaks on Frontex at ‘Open Doors’ Summer School in Naples
        
    
On Sunday 18 June 2017 Melanie Fink, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Europa Institute, held a lecture on Schengen and the new European Border and Coast Guard Regulation in the framework of the ‘Open Doors’ Summer School on Migration, (Sea) Border Control and Human Rights.
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    New commission investigates Russia's crimes of aggression against Ukraine
        
    
Can Russia be prosecuted for war crimes against Ukraine? The International Criminal Court does not have this jurisdiction. To fill this void in jurisdiction, a new commission has been created: an International Centre for the Prosecution of Crimes of Aggression, the ICPA.
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    Daphne Tona maps the brain
        
    
Psychologist Daphne Tona is one of the first to investigate a small nucleus in the brain stem 'in vivo' in living volunteers. That nucleus is involved in cognitive function and neurological and psychiatric disorders. With this research Tona is further mapping the brain. PhD defence on September 10.
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    A conversation with Francesca Albanese, UN Special Rapporteur on the Occupied Palestinian Territories
    
    
Lecture
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    Dialogues Between Artistic Research and Science and Technology Studies
        
    
'Dialogues Between Artistic Research and Science and Technology Studies', edited by Henk Borgdorff, Peter Peters and Trevor Pinch, will be published by Routledge on November 18
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    Data Carpentry with R for Social Sciences and Humanities
    
    
Workshop
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    Beyond the Dichotomy between Migrant Smuggling and Human Trafficking
    
    
PhD defence
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    Building bridges: a multidisciplinary approach to controlled human hookworm infection
    
    
PhD defence
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    Data Carpentry with R for Social Sciences and Humanities
    
    
Workshop
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    LED3 Lecture: Probing the human proteome for therapeutic opportunities
    
    
Lecture
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    Unraveling the Complexity of Human Oogenesis and Reproductive Tract Development
    
    
PhD defence
 
