422 search results for “ecological economie” in the Student website
-
Antonella MaielloFaculty of Governance and Global Affairs
-
Rodrigo OchigameFaculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
-
Morena SkalameraFaculty of Humanities
-
Lisanne van HoutumFaculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
-
Martijn BezemerFaculty of Science
-
Alexander van OudenhovenFaculty of Science
-
'I always consider: What would have worked best for me?'
Starting with the ‘why’, putting herself in her students’ shoes and providing structure. These are three ways in which environmental scientist Ranran Wang tries to make her course as interesting and manageable as possible. With success: she has been nominated for Science Teacher of the Year 2022.
-
Leah PowellFaculty of Archaeology
-
NWO and the National Science Foundation China award 1.1M euro to urban resilience research
Arnold Tukker and Mingming Hu (CML) will look for urban resilience solutions in the Dutch-Chinese ReSURE2 project that received 1.1M euro.
-
Mosquitos in town: how to prevent disease risk (and still green your city)
In cities, parks take the blame for mosquito problems. However, the real issue is usually a few streets away. Drains and standing rainwater create ideal breeding grounds for larvae. As a result, controlling adult mosquitoes in parks makes little sense, says environmental scientist Louie Krol in his…
-
Martijn van EngelenburgFaculty of Science
-
Florian Schneider
Faculty of Humanities
-
Yixu WangFaculty of Science
-
Henrik BarmentloFaculty of Science
-
Tomer FishmanFaculty of Science
-
Human noise makes cod inactive. When it gets quiet again, they take off
She narrowly defied bureaucracy and spent days angling for cod. In the North Sea, marine biologist Inge van der Knaap discovered that noise significantly disturbs fish behaviour. ‘There is now a lot of attention for underwater noise.’
-
Laura SchererFaculty of Science
-
Lauran van OersFaculty of Science
-
José MogollónFaculty of Science
-
Embryos of the bitterling perform a somersault. This teaches us something new about natural selection
Even embryos can become embroiled in an evolutionary arms race with another species. Leiden biologists demonstrate this with larvae of the rosy bitterling that parasitize the gills of freshwater mussels. They published their research on February 19 in PNAS.
-
Alistair KeffordFaculty of Humanities
-
Chibuike UcheAfrika-Studiecentrum
-
Mohammed ChahimFaculty of Science
-
Kiki BoomgaardFaculty of Science
-
Jean-François BlancFaculty of Science
-
Ursula Cardenas MamaniFaculty of Science
-
Sónia Martins da CunhaFaculty of Science
-
Juan Munizaga-PlazaFaculty of Science
-
Ingeborg KlutsFaculty of Science
-
Gijsbert KorevaarFaculty of Science
-
Patrik HenrikssonFaculty of Science
-
Chen Tang -
Paul BehrensFaculty of Science
-
How polluting buildings and machinery make rich countries ever richer
Rich countries are getting richer because of environmentally polluting (construction) investments from the past, largely at the expense of poor countries. This was shown by long-term economic and environmental data. 'The gap between poor and rich countries is widening.' Scientists from the Leiden Institute…
-
Students seek sustainable solutions for businesses
Master’s students in Industrial Ecology and Governance of Sustainability have helped answer organisations’ questions about sustainability
-
Charlotte LapréFaculty of Science
-
Tales YamamotoFaculty of Science
-
Stellina SamuelFaculty of Science
-
Takuma WatariFaculty of Science
-
Arthur RonnerFaculty of Science
-
Alessia Linares CapurroFaculty of Science
-
Berend MintjesFaculty of Science
-
René Kleijn joins UN panel on resource use
How can we manage our natural resources more sustainably? That’s the key question behind the United Nations’ International Resource Panel (IRP). The panel recently welcomed a new member: René Kleijn, Professor of Industrial Ecology at Leiden University. We asked him three questions about his new rol…
-
Windu YusufFaculty of Humanities
-
Sine BagaturFaculty of Humanities
-
Siran HuangFaculty of Humanities
-
Lucy van EckFaculty of Humanities
-
Youssef CherifFaculty of Humanities
-
Sofie Hajer wins prize for research on balancing wind energy and biodiversity
How do you combine the growth of wind energy with the protection of vulnerable seabirds? With her master’s thesis on this delicate balance, Sofie Hajer won the 2025 Unilever Research Prize. Her work provides new insights into how ecology and policy can strengthen each other.
-
Sterre ter HaarFaculty of Science