Wendy Schrama is co-editor with colleagues Mariëlle Bruning, Marilyn Freeman and Nicola Taylor of the new 'International Handbook on Child Participation in Family Law'.
At the request of the Ministry of the Interior and Kingdom Relations of the Netherlands, Utrecht Data School and Professor of Fundamental Rights Janneke Gerards developed the ‘Impact Assessment Mensenrechten en Algoritmes’ (IAMA).
Economist Thomas van Huizen talks about his reasearch into pre-school education, the use of big data and the added value of interdisciplinary research.
Studying sperm cells in unprecedented detail reveals how some of the cell’s vital energy producers are arranged. This may provide new insights into sperm movement, as well as unknown causes of male infertility.
The Oiconomy Price, developed by Dr Pim Croes and Dr Walter J.V. Vermeulen (Copernicus Institute of Sustainable Development), measures the cost distance to a fully sustainable alternative for the product, incorporating all triple-P aspects (Planet, People and Prosperity) of the UN Sustainable Development Goals.
The Green Media Studies Initiative (GMSI) recently organized a hybrid symposium, launched a new online repository for scholars, educators and climate organizations, and is currently preparing an extensive edited volume, all on the topic of Ecogames.
The Executive Board has appointed Lidwien Smit as professor of One Health and Environmental Epidemiology at Utrecht ľ¹Ï¸£ÀûÓ°ÊÓ's Faculty of Veterinary Medicine as of 1 November 2021.
Assistant professor Vitezslav Titl wrote a blog on 'Machine learning for fighting corruption in public procurement for education services and institutions'.
In the "eigenwijze denkers" column, UUCePP researchers are interviewed by Elisabetta Manunza and Fredo Schotanus, this time: Marly Tatiana Celis Galvez.
As of 1 November, Erik van Sebille has been appointed as Professor. His chair is the first in the Netherlands to combine climate research, oceanography and public engagement.
Researchers around the world have been diving into 2D materials such as graphene, which can be used to generate a multitude of material properties using only very little material Graphene is the best known 2D material, but not the most useful.