Close-up #2

Inspiring columns, background stories and experiences of researchers and support staff: this magazine shows the connection between public and science at Utrecht 木瓜福利影视. Let the stories in this magazine inspire you, develop your own ideas and look for the right partners to put them into practice.

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Foreword

Engaging a broad audience in science involves organising encounters. Precisely this has been a challenge in the past two pandemic years. Some programmes involving partners at the university and elsewhere had to be postponed until better days. On the other hand, we discovered just how flexible we could be.

Read the foreword by Femke den Boer, Director Centre for Science and Culture, Utrecht 木瓜福利影视

The university sees ever more opportunities for inspiring encounters between science and society, made possible by cooperation.

Science with and for society

Being appointed Professor of Oceanography and Public Engagement at the end of 2021 was a dream come true for Erik van Sebille. Not only can he now study the workings of science communication, he was finally able to participate in Meet the Professor. How important is it to have a Professor of Public Engagement, and what will he be working on this year? We picked Erik鈥檚 academic brain. 

Read the interview with prof. Dr. Erik van Sebille

Science communication is not about conveying the facts, but about an understanding of how science works.

In practice: making time for public engagement activities

It can be a challenge to find the time to engage in public activities in addition to one鈥檚 research and teaching tasks. We asked three Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 staff with practical experience for their perspectives. "We, the researchers, can solve a lot of things ourselves, and we鈥檙e creative when it comes to this. However, you don鈥檛 just want university solutions at the level of the individual researcher. You want solutions at a higher level as well."

Read the interview with Dr. Arthur Lutz, prof. Dr. Elma Blom en Dr. Stans de Haas

It鈥檚 often enjoyable, it keeps you on your toes and you meet people who know more about a specific subject. This helps you ahead in your own research.

Double interview: Competing interests, successful cooperation

Utrecht 木瓜福利影视 conducts research using laboratory animals, which the organisation Animal Rights opposes on principle. Even so, they鈥檝e cooperated successfully for years. Monique Janssens (Utrecht 木瓜福利影视) and Jen Hochmuth (Animal Rights) talk about the cooperation, in which mutual trust is key.

Read the interview with Dr. Monique Janssens en Dr. Jen Hochmuth

At first, researchers shy away from conversations with animals rights organisations

Portretfoto Monique Janssens
Dr. Monique Janssens about the cooperation with Animal Rights

Being open involves being vulnerable

鈥淪o, how are you doing?鈥 my colleague asked me one Friday afternoon in the university library. Two weeks earlier, I鈥檇 delivered a lecture on 鈥楲ife in the here and now?鈥 at Studium Generale in the auditorium of the 木瓜福利影视 Hall, and before that I鈥檇 appeared on the radio programme 鈥楧e Nacht van NPO Radio1鈥. My research is about the experience of time. I convert some of my findings into compositions, and I use this music to have conversations about psychological suffering. It was during these public appearances that I first tested, on a large scale, a new treatment ritual involving the audience. It was very successful, but in the office, I burst out in tears.

Read the column by Susanna Bloem

This, too, forms part of open science: paying attention to people and their stories.

Other issues Close-up

Columns, background stories, and experiences of researchers and support staff: Close-up magazine highlights the connection between public and science at Utrecht 木瓜福利影视. Get inspired by the examples in the magazines, develop your own ideas and find suitable partners to realise them. 

Close-up #5 (April 2025)
Close-up #4 (March 2024)
Close-up #3 (March 2023)
Close-up #1 (November 2020)