473 search results for “scholarly snel” in the Public website
- 
                                    
    
    Paul SnelISSC
 - 
                                    
    
    Sander SnelUniversitair Facilitair Bedrijf
 - 
                                    
    
    Anouk SnelAdministration and Central Services
 - 
                                    
    
    Jolanda SnelSocial & Behavioural Sciences
 - 
                                    
    
    Jori SnelsFaculty of Humanities
 - 
                                    
    Scholarly Vices: A Longue Durée History
    
    
This project tries to explain the persistence of this cultural repertoire by zooming in on (1) interaction between idioms (cultural repertoires) available to scholars at certain points in time, (2) mechanisms that help transmit repertoires across time and place, and (3) rhetorical purposes for which…
 - 
                                    
    Scholarly meetings
    
    
At LUCIS we offer a varied programme of scholarly meetings (conferences, workshops) which reflect our multidisciplinary and comparative view on Islam and Muslim societies in past and present.
 - 
                                    
    Scholarly Dogmatism: A Rhetorical History, 1800-2000
    
    
This project traces how, why, and under what circumstances scholars invoked the trope of “dogmatism,” especially in controversies. Relevant controversies from various fields, periods, and countries will be subjected to in-depth rhetorical analysis.
 - 
                                    
    The scholarly self: character, habit, and virtue in the humanities, 1860-1930
    
    
Why did 'character', 'habit', and 'virtue' serve as key terms in late 19th and early 20th-century scholarly correspondences, biographies, and obituaries? Why did scholars around 1900 display so much interest in the working habits and character traits of what they called the 'scholarly self'?
 - 
                                    
    Falling Short of Expectations: Evaluative Languages in Scholarly Book Reviews, 1900-2000
    
    
What evaluative languages (errors, mistakes, vices, etc.) did book reviewers employ? To what extent and on what occasions did they invoke early modern vices? And to what extent did this differ across fields or change over the course of the century?
 - 
                                    
    Pride and Prejudice: Moral Languages in Scholarly Codes of Conduct, 1900-2000
    
    
If idioms employed in codes of conduct could be as idiosyncratic as examples suggest, then to what extent did early modern language of vice, too, persist in this genre?
 - 
                                    
    Observatory – Toward integrated information about the openness of scholarly journals
    
    
Lots of efforts are being made to promote open science practices in scholarly publishing. However, information on the openness of scholarly journals is highly fragmented. There are various data sources that provide information on specific aspects of openness, but there is hardly any integration of these…
 - 
                                    
    Scholarly publications
    
    
Below are some of the scholarly works published within the context of the Institutions for Conflict Resolution programme.
 - 
                                    
    Scholarly temptations: self-discipline and desire in Victorian Britain.
    
    
How did British scholars and scientists in the period of discipline formation envision, experience and resist scholarly temptations?
 - 
                                    
    Dogmatism: On the History of a Scholarly Vice
    
    
Why does the history of dogmatism deserve our attention? This open access book analyses uses of the term, following dogmatism from Victorian Britain to Cold War America, examining why it came to be regarded as a vice, and how understandings of its meaning have evolved.
 - 
                                    
    Scholarly Personae in the History of Orientalism, 1870-1930
    
    
This volume examines how the history of the humanities might be written through the prism of scholarly personae, understood as time- and place-specific models of being a scholar.
 - 
                                    
    Pieter Jakob Cosijn’s Correspondence and Scholarly Collaboration at the End of the Nineteenth Century
    
    
Pieter Jakob Cosijn (1840-1899) was Leiden University’s first Professor of Germanic and AngloSaxon Philology. A recognised expert in the field of Old English grammar and textual criticism, Cosijn corresponded with various prominent philologists and experts in his field, including Julius Zupitza, Arthur…
 - 
                                    
    Navigating Networks through Scholarly Correspondence: Epistolary Exchange of Knowledge on Early Medieval English
    
    
In an age before GoogleDocs and LinkedIn, 19th-century scholars relied on letter-writing for collaboration, peer-feedback and the building and sustaining of academic networks. Letters were a quick, efficient way to share insights, data and discoveries. Scholarly correspondence thus allows a vital behind-the-scenes…
 - 
                                    
    How To Be A Historian - Scholarly Personae In Historical Studies 1800-2000
    
    
What makes a good historian? When historians raise this question, as they have done for centuries, they often do so to highlight that certain personal attitudes or dispositions are indispensable or studying the past. Yet their vieuws on what virtues, skills or competencies historians need most differ…
 - 
                                    
    Understanding scientific progress by analysing the context of scholarly citations
    
    
The objective of this project is to fundamentally improve our understanding of the ways in which science progresses. Empirical studies have used bibliographic metadata to provide relevant insights, but these studies have failed to tell us how science progresses. Supported by computational advances and…
 - 
                                    
    Understanding the value of social media metrics for research evaluation
    
    
The availability of indicators based on social media has opened the possibility to track the online interactions between social media users and scholarly entities.
 - 
                                    
    Idols of the Mind: Modern Variations on a Baconian Theme, 1800-2000
    
    
Drawing on a broad array of sources, this project examines modern retrievals of Bacon’s idols, thereby testing Justus von Liebig’s intriguing observation, back in 1863, that Bacon’s name lived on mainly in mottos or stereotypical phrases. More importantly, it examines the rhetorical purposes served…
 - 
                                    
    The Dark Middle Ages: Language of Vice in Histories of Science, 1700-1900
    
    
In comparing a selection of 18th-century histories to a representative sample of 19th-century histories of science, this project inquires: Which early modern vices persisted into the 19th century and to what extent were those vices embodied in anecdotes, conveyed through commonplaces, or symbolically…
 - 
                                    
    Hodegetics: Language of Vice in Student Advice Literature, 1700-1900
    
    
This project analyzes to what extent hodegetical textbooks relied on each other in warning their readers against vicious habits, how much continuity their catalogs of vice displayed, and to what extent vices that persisted throughout the 18th and 19th centuries were associated with easy-to-remember…
 - 
                                    
    Reading and Transferring the Sublime. The Scholarly Reception and Political Relevance of the Sublime in the Dutch Golden Age
    
    
This research will investigate which aspects of On the sublime received attention in the intellectual milieu of the seventeenth century and how the sublime found its way in the political and artistic discourse of that time. Thus I aim to shed light on the role of art in politics and society in this…
 - 
                                    
    
    Herman PaulFaculty of Humanities
 - 
                                    
    'Expertise' in Elgar Encyclopedia of International Relations
    
    
In this chapter of the Elgar Encyclopedia of International Relations, Carraro explores how expertise is defined and contested in International Relations.
 - 
                                    
    Uppsala Symposium on International Investment Law as a Field for Scholarly Research
        
    
On 3 June 2016, the Symposium on International Investment Law as a Field for Scholarly Research was organized by Uppsala University, together with the Nordic Network on Investment Law and the Swedish Institute of International Law.
 - 
                                    
    Rooswijk 1740
    
    
Een scheepswrak, zijn bemanning en het leven in de 18de eeuw
 - 
                                    
    Workshop: Dilemmas in Scholarly Communcation
    
    
Workshop
 - 
                                    
    CARMA
    
    
An increasing number of researchers in the social sciences, humanities, and arts (SSH+A) are working with non-traditional research outputs (NTROs), such as films, performances, and sound recordings. However, these forms of research often receive little recognition within the digital scholarly infrastructure,…
 - 
                                    
    Introducing MetaROR – An open peer review platform for metaresearch
        
    
MetaROR, a new open peer review platform, was launched today at the AIMOS 2024 conference in Canberra, Australia. MetaROR is a joint initiative of AIMOS and RoRI. As a core partner in RoRI, CWTS has been involved in the development of the platform with a couple of colleagues and is proud to contribute…
 - Meet our staff
 - 
                                    
    AI in beeld - Mogelijkheden, risico’s en richtlijnen van kunstmatige intelligentie voor de beeldende journalistiek
    
    
Met AI kunnen nieuwsredacties razendsnel beelden genereren — maar tegen welke prijs? Dit onderzoeksrapport opgesteld door prof. dr. Jaap de Jong, dr. Astrid Vandendaele, Maartje van der Woude en Stef Arends (Universiteit Leiden), baseert zich op 59 interviews met beeldmakers, redacteurs en experts uit…
 - 
                                    
    Blood, Tears and Samurai Love: A Tragic Tale from Eighteenth-Century Japan
    
    
Leiden-Yale collaboration uncovers a tale of samurai same-sex love in a library manuscript.
 - 
                                    
    Disclosing Arabic Papyri from the Leiden University Library
    
    
Leiden University is famous for its library’s large collection of Oriental manuscripts. Part of this collection is a group of 104 Arabic documents written on papyrus and paper (Or. 8264 and 12885). These documents date from the 7th through 10th century CE and cover a wide range of subjects (private…
 - 
                                    
    The intimate voice of the Russian Avant-garde: adapting the aesthetic self and the rise of Socialist Realism
    
    
This proposed research uses ego-documents from visual artists that were not intended for publication to reassess the scholarly debate on the demise of the Russian Avant-garde aesthetic in the twenties and early thirties of the 20th century.
 - 
                                    
    Urban Craftsmen and Traders in the Roman World
    
    
This volume, featuring sixteen contributions from leading Roman historians and archaeologists, sheds new light on approaches to the economic history of urban craftsmen and traders in the Roman world, with a particular emphasis on the imperial period.
 - 
                                    
    Register your output and activities in LUCRIS
        
    
Have you ever wondered how you can increase the visibility, accessibility, and recognition of your research while complying with funding and national requirements? LUCRIS is the answer!
 - 
                                    
    Technology and Operation Management (TOM)
    
    
The Technology and Operation Management (TOM) group focuses on the operational challenges of adopting new cutting-edge technologies in areas such as artificial intelligence, precision medicine, and high-tech instrumentation.
 - 
                                    
    Publications
    
    
Members of COI@Leiden have published extensively in the area of institutions for conflict resolution on a wide array of topics. These publications can be found below.
 - 
                                    
    Online Course De-Mystifying Mindfulness
    
    
Around the world, mindfulness has become big business. This course combines conventional scholarly inquiry from multiple disciplines with experiential learning to provide a responsible, comprehensive, and inclusive education about mindfulness as a contemporary phenomenon.
 - 
                                    
    Open Access and Copyright
    
    
Leiden University has an Open Access policy and a Copyright Information Office.
 - 
                                    
    Open Access and Copyright
    
    
Leiden University has an Open Access policy and a Copyright Information Office.
 - 
                                    
    Islam in North Africa: A Critical Return to Youth
    
    
In recent years, and especially since the ‘Arab Spring’ of 2011, a growing body of research, media reporting, and scholarly literature has focused on the role of ‘Arab youth’ as the drivers of social and political movements across the Middle East and North Africa.
 - 
                                    
    Open Access Publishing & Copyright
    
    
Leiden University policy requires researchers to make all their Leiden-affiliated peer-reviewed articles available.
 - 
                                    
    Reenchanting Buddhism via Modernizing Magic: Guru Wuguang of Taiwan’s Philosophy and Science of ‘Superstition’
    
    
Cody Bahir defended his thesis on 1 June 2017.
 - 
                                    
    What we do
    
    
Our public programme includes lecture series, conferences, visiting fellowships, panel discussions and many other interesting events. Have a look at what we've organised in the past years.
 - 
                                    
    Special issue: Storying multi-species relationships, commoning and the state in the Himalayas
    
    
Himalayan environments have changed and continue to change as a result of how people interpret, source, and use them. Scholarly investigation of the induced transformations, whether in deforestation, dam construction, or glacial melt, highlights how man is shaping the world in the Anthropocene.
 - 
                                    
    About the programme
    
    
The multidisciplinary one-year master’s programme in North American Studies provides students with comprehensive knowledge of North American history, literature, film, and culture and their connection to contemporary social, political, literary and cultural developments in an international perspecti…