Due to the cancellation of this workshop, the聽Centre for Digital Humanities聽is now organizing a replacement workshop for the course聽'Basics of Statistics 鈥 Hands-on training day for humanities teachers/researchers'聽on Friday March 18.聽Staff members of all faculties can register.
Sanli Faez, Liesbeth van de Grift and Marjolijn Haasnoot participate in a national taskforce that will explore how Dutch climate researchers can join forces for a common agenda for climate research.
Researchers discussed the challenges & opportunities of publishing in an Open Science context during the roundtable 'How does Open Science affect our publishing strategy' on 10 February 2022. You can read the report here.
Associate professor Genderstudies Kathrin Thiele and Associate professor Comparative Literature and Transcultural Aesthetics Birgit Kaiser have recently published their new book The Ends of Critique.
Building on the book Liberty before Liberalism by Quentin Skinner, Rethinking Liberty before Liberalism offers new histories of freedom and republicanism.
They are developed in a context of international collaboration, trade and governance, but is the legal and normative framework we see today sustainable over time?
The Deep Transitions Futures research project has developed a global crowdsourcing initiative, the project introduces the three scenarios and asks participants to choose which future they want to live in.
Communication scientists Jan ten Thije and Inge Versteegt studied how asylum seekers value the information they receive from COA upon arrival. Student Houda Al Kalaf also contributed to the research.
In a prize-winning article, Rutger Claassen and Lisa Herzog introduce the concept of "economic agency" to assess whether economic structures are unjust.
Els Stronks shows that young people at the time were challenged to observe their own use of language as an object of study, developing new knowledge about language.
The new implementation can enable considerable improvements in countless applications that work with signals or data flows from sensors, from MRI scanners to systems that predict earthquakes.