4,698 search results for “been” in the Staff website
-
The Monroe Doctrine Refurbished? The US-Latin American relations under Trump 2: Exploring possible scenarios
Lecture
-
HEAR ME NOW
Exhibition
-
Imagining Christian Kingship in Sigismund II Augustus’s "Genesis" Tapestries at Wawel Castle (1553)
PhD defence
-
New Year's Reception Faculty of Science
Conference
-
Youth Precarity in South Korea
Lecture
-
Approaching equilibrium in a dynamic network
PhD defence
-
From Motion to Future to Speech Act: The Functional Elevation of luai-khə ‘come-go’ in Ji’an Gan Chinese
Lecture, CHiLL series
-
The Crimmigrators
Lecture
-
Understanding EUROTYPES: How Cultural Perceptions Shape Discourse, Policy, and Public Opinion in the European Union
Lecture
-
Playing with words
Arts and leisure, Personal development, Language, Arts and leisure
-
[CANCELLED] Forum Shopping from Below: The Global Political Economy of Transnational Migrant Advocacy Networks
Lecture, Lunch Research Seminar
-
Guilt by Location: Forced Displacement and Population Sorting in Civil Wars
Lecture
-
Tools for real-time study of bioorthogonal conversions in the living system
PhD defence
-
Archaeology in the Dealer’s Archive
Lecture, Faculty Lecture
-
A critical look at NATO, Europe, and nuclear strategy
Lecture
-
Southeast Asia as method, History as prevention Decentering the history of measles (to better control the disease?)
Lecture, Global Histories of Knowledge Seminar
-
Why is the museum a topic in the current context?
Lecture
-
The role of AGC kinases and auxin in male fertility
PhD defence
-
Iran Between War and Tyranny: What Comes Next?
Debate
- Between the River and the Sea: An Evening with Yousef Sweid
-
Sancisi-Weerdenburg Lecture: The Achaemenid Persian Empire and World History
Lecture
-
Dialogue Session on Leiden University’s Colonial and Slavery Past
Dialogue session
- CMGI Brown Bag Seminars 2025-2026
-
Leiden University Nationalism Network
Lecture, Leiden University Nationalism Network | Roundtable
-
Colonizing Palestine: the Zionist Left and the making of the Palestinian Nakba
Lecture, Book talk
-
Lecture: Rethinking Platform Capitalism
Lecture
-
Natural Product Antibiotics: Synthesis and Next Generation Analogues
PhD defence
-
Planet Formation through the Lens of Dynamics
PhD defence
-
The Evolution of Aromatic Chemistry in Interstellar Space
Lecture, Harold Linnartz Astrochemistry Prize lecture
- Social Exclusion, Unmet Support Needs, and Vulnerability to Extremist Exploitation Among Some Autistic People
-
Staging the Heroine. The Construction and Performance of Female Heroism in Literature, the Visual Arts and Theatre (c. 1350-1800)
Conference
-
Centre for Digital Scholarship Summer Training Week 2026
Workshops, lectures
-
Caste: A Global History
Lecture, Book Talk
- International Criminal Justice and AI: Hype, Game-changer, or New Normal?
-
Chasing Events
Booklaunch
-
Health & Well-being Lunchmeeting | Rethinking evidence in prevention: beyond randomized controlled trials [CANCELLED AND POSTPONED]
Conference
-
Grotian Law and Modernity at the Dawn of a New Age - International Conference
Conference
-
Leiden University celebrates Dies Natalis: ‘Ahead of the times for 450 years’
An extra-long cortège, three honorary doctorates, a quiz about 450 years of university history, a Dies Natalis rap and a call to defend academic freedom: these all featured in Leiden University’s 450th Dies Natalis celebration and the official start of its jubilee year.
-
Social Science Matters: Out-of-home placement
...What does seem clear, though, is that there is a great deal of room for improvement in the process of out-of-home placement. The FSW's social and behavioural scientists give their views.
-
This was 2023! An overview of Humanities in the news
So much has happened this year! 2023 was an eventful year in which several wars raged about which our experts could offer interpretation. It was also the year in which the government made apologies for the slavery past. Leiden humanities scholars were at the forefront of this with their research on…
-
D&I Symposium 2026: ‘You can’t call something inclusive if it doesn’t include everyone’
How can our university really become inclusive? This is what students and staff discussed at our annual Diversity & Inclusion symposium. ‘It’s moving from a have-to to a want-to’
-
FGGA in 2023: This was the year of our faculty
2023 was another year full of highlights and special moments for the faculty of Governance and Global Affairs. Find out what the year was like in this year overview: we take you through the most important moments and news items month of each month.
-
In memoriam Harold V.J. Linnartz 1965 – 2023: Unlocking the Chemistry of the Heavens
With great sadness we share the news that Prof. Harold Linnartz passed away suddenly and unexpectedly on Sunday 31 December 2023. We are all in shock, and our thoughts are with his wife and children, other family, and friends. Harold was at the heart of our institute, as a researcher, as a supervisor,…
-
LUC Student Wins Nobel Peace Prize Essay Competition
Natalia Sobrino-Saeb, third-year student at Leiden University College The Hague, won the challenge by the Ignitor Fellowship Program held by the Nobel Peace Center for her essay on the threats to journalism in Mexico. On December 10th Natalia met the Committee of the Ignitor Fellowship in Oslo and attended…
-
First scientific images Euclid telescope exceed all expectations
Space telescope Euclid is capable of unravelling the secrets of the universe. That is what the images published by ESA today show, according to astronomers working with the telescope's data. The images exceed all expectations. Scientists within the Euclid consortium, including astronomers Henk Hoekstra…
-
The colour purple: why it's important to our new Dean
During the New Year's Reception at FSW, new Dean Sarah de Rijcke gave her maiden speech. The first official moment at which she's able to share what she stands for and what to expect of her. In case you weren't there, or you want to read the speech at your own pace, below you can find the integral copy…
-
No exams or lectures, but building a radio telescope with empty paint cans
No more lectures and exams for the Radio Astronomy course taught by Michiel Brentjens. The corona crisis is a moment of reflection that has changed his whole way of teaching. Instead of being in front of the class, he lets his students build a radio telescope with paint cans.
-
Hanneke Hulst on realistic expectations for researchers: ‘Let’s stop expecting people to be experts at everything.’
‘Am I setting a good example myself?’ Hanneke Hulst wonders. As Recognition and Rewards project leader, she maintains that we should stop expecting researchers to be experts at everything, even though she herself keeps a lot of balls in the air.
-
Interdisciplinary research: labour market on the move
Migration, globalisation, technological developments, climate change: the greatest challenges of our time all affect our labour market. But how exactly? And can we influence this? Professor of Economics Olaf van Vliet regards it as his job to reveal how things really are. ‘That way, we can work on solutions…
-
Critical Caribbean Thought on Colonial Legacies
The Caribbean as we know it today is fundamentally a product of colonial activity and globalisation. Practically everyone that inhabits the Caribbean has ancestors from different continents due to colonial activity, which profoundly affects the area to this day. Caribbean writers, both in the Caribbean…
