277 search results for “some age” in the Staff website
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Risks of radical changes to some of the GDPR pillars
EUobserver has published an article on the European Commission’s leaked 'Digital Omnibus' draft, featuring comments by Gianclaudio Malgieri, Associate Professor at eLaw, on potential implications for the GDPR.
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Redesigning assignments in the age of AI (Science)
Didactics, Working effectively, ICT
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AnyAge.ai Hackathon: Addressing Age Bias and Fairness in AI-Driven Job Recruitment
Hackathon
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Antoinette HuijbersFaculty of Archaeology
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Laura BosmansFaculty of Science
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Jeanin van HooftFaculty of Medicine
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Nina JaspersFaculty of Archaeology
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Johanneke PortieljeFaculty of Medicine
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Jacobijn GusseklooFaculty of Medicine
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Ria ReisFaculty of Medicine
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Thea Vliet VlielandFaculty of Medicine
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Some disruption to the former Gorlaeus Faculty Office car park on 2 December
Facility
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These students studied Byzantine Rome... in Rome: ‘It was an immersive experience’
Professor Joanita Vroom, together with the Royal Netherlands Institute in Rome (KNIR) offered the course Byzantine Rome in September 2023. The course, co-taught by Vroom, Letty ten Harkel and various guest lecturers, investigated the transition of the city of Rome from Late Antiquity to the Middle Ages,…
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Discussing the Personnel Monitor with your team: ‘Grab some post-its and go for it!’
It will be on the agenda of many a team meeting these coming weeks: how can we act on the results of the Personnel Monitor? We asked two managers how they have gone about this, what the results of their meetings have been and whether they have any tips for their colleagues.
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Faculty of Humanities ushers in the new year: 'Build in some low-pressure time'
In a world beset with war, climate problems and skyrocketing energy prices, it is good to have some 'slack time' now and then. That was Dean Mark Rutgers' message at the Faculty of Humanities' New Year reception.
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Children learn how medicines work: ‘Some pills go in your bottom!’
A pill can make you better, but how exactly does it work? Primary school children from The Hague found out during a visit to the Centre for Human Drug Research (CHDR) as part of a new teaching module ‘The journey of a pill’.
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Kim de JongFaculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
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Investigations conducted by child protection bodies have been 'substandard for some time'
Investigations conducted by several Dutch child protection bodies within family situations are inadequate. Due to lack of knowledge, time and money, these investigations are not carried out properly, with major consequences for the families involved.
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Lorentz Lecture: Working towards evidence-based care for aging transgender and non-binary people
Lecture
- Unfolding Finitudes: Current Ethnographies of Aging, Dying and End-of-Life Care | Online Webinar Series
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does this Inca language come from? Verb conjugations should provide some answers
When university lecturer Martine Bruil was on exchange in Ecuador as a teenager, she fell in love with the area's ancient languages. Now, more than 20 years later, she is starting a research project on the kinship of the language Awapit with the Quechua language that was spread by the Incas.
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Fair Educational Assessment in the Age of AI (FAIR-ASSESS)
Deliberative assembly
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Young: How AHL15 delays developmental phase transitions to prevent ageing in plants
PhD defence
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Can birds imitate Star Wars robot? Yes – and some are surprisingly good at it
Scientists have discovered that starlings and parrots can imitate the complex sounds of Star Wars droid R2-D2 remarkably well. Their study reveals how the structure of a bird’s vocal organ determines its vocal abilities – and how citizen science helps uncover it.
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A New Age of Infrastructure Development? An Historical Comparison of Nested Dependency in Pakistan and Egypt
Lecture, Lunch Research Seminar
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Grotian Law and Modernity at the Dawn of a New Age - International Conference
Conference
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Marloes van OosterhoutFaculty of Science
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Weishuo LiFaculty of Archaeology
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Willeke van RoonFaculty of Medicine
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Rolf GroenwoldFaculty of Medicine
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Roderick GeertsFaculty of Archaeology
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Gerard Jan BlauwFaculty of Medicine
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Suzanne CannegieterFaculty of Medicine
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Johan JukemaFaculty of Medicine
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Quentin BourgeoisFaculty of Archaeology
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Johanna MeijerFaculty of Medicine
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Jacobine MelisFaculty of Archaeology
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Eline SlagboomFaculty of Medicine
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Irini SifogeorgakisFaculty of Archaeology
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Patrick RensenFaculty of Medicine
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Frank StaalFaculty of Medicine
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H LambFaculty of Medicine
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Arjan LouwenFaculty of Archaeology
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Jonathan OuelletFaculty of Archaeology
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Using a camera to look into a book's spine: ‘You might just find that one rare text’
What do you do if you have a book from the sixteenth or seventeenth century, but you suspect that the binding contains a fragment of a medieval manuscript? University lecturer Thijs Porck has received an NWO grant to experiment with a camera attached to a tube. 'The project boils down to keyhole surgeries…
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Rules for a lawless world? The international legal order in an age of great-power struggle for normative primacy
Lecture, Keynote Lectures
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Ann BrysbaertFaculty of Archaeology
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Tullio AbruzzeseFaculty of Archaeology
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Wei ChuFaculty of Archaeology
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indigenous ceramic production in the Lesser Antilles during the Ceramic Age and Early Colonial Period
PhD defence