3,528 search results for “children s rights” in the Public website
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‘Nature likes a mess’
Wouter Moerland is on a two-year secondment as ecology adviser at the Municipality of Leiden. This biology alumnus talks animatedly about his work. ‘We’re working hard to increase nature’s chances in town.’
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Applying for jobs during the coronavirus pandemic: Ancient History alumni share their experiences
Three alumni of our Master’s degree programme in Ancient History talk to us about how they found a job after graduation during the coronavirus pandemic. During the interview, Gabriël hung a huge board covered in post-it reminders behind his laptop, Molly was glad that the members of the selection committee…
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A podium for science
Rector Magnificus Carel Stolker will retire on 8 February. If there’s one theme running through his career, it’s the links between the University and society. In this series of pre-retirement discussions, Stolker will talk one last time to people from within and without the University. This edition…
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Introducing: Project Group The Scholarly Self
In November 2013, three PhD students started in Herman Paul’s VIDI project ‘The Scholarly Self: Character, Habit, and Virtue in the Humanities, 1860-1930’. In this newsletter they introduce themselves.
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Psychologist Bart Verkuil strikes a blow against burnout
Burnout is on the increase. It is caused by group pressure, being ‘on’ all the time and asking too much of ourselves. Clinical psychologist Bart Verkuil advises lowering our expectations.
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‘As an ambassador you witness history as it unfolds’
Carmen Gonsalves has been the Dutch ambassador to Chile since this autumn. She studied history in Leiden. How useful has her degree been and what’s it like to be an ambassador? ‘Diplomacy is fascinating.’ We spoke to her just before the presidential elections.
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‘Terrorism is theatre and we are the audience’
After every attack, terrorism researchers are often asked the same question: who did it? Jeanine de Roy van Zuijdewijn, a researcher at Leiden University, doesn’t always have a ready-made answer.
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Lorentz: celebrated physicist, born mediator
Emeritus professors Dirk van Delft and Frits Berends both channelled their inner Sherlock Holmes as they delved into the life and work of the great physicist Hendrik Lorentz. Their voluminous biography ‘Lorentz: gevierd fysicus, geboren verzoener’ (Lorentz: celebrated physicist, born mediator) is published…
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Doing science in the mud at Lowlands
Conducting experiments next to the huge speakers of the Alpha Stage at Lowlands. This was reality for researchers Max van Duijn and Tessa Verhoef, and they were loving it. 'Yesterday evening we were completely covered in mud.'
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Blog Post | Is UN Celebrity Diplomacy in China Effective?
In this blog post Saskia Postema and Jan Melissen claim that Chinese UN celebrities’ activism under Xi Jinping has become aligned with the Chinese leadership’s ambitions.
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Student in war time
Jacques Waisvisz (98) is one of our oldest living alumni. As a Jewish student in the Second World War, he was forbidden from completing his studies. How does he look back at that time, and what was life like afterwards? ‘No one thought that the situation here would become so bad.’
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The University in the time of coronavirus: from working at the kitchen table to a livestream PhD defence
The outbreak of coronavirus has radically changed our life and work. We have had to work, teach and conduct research from home. How has coronavirus changed your work? What do you miss most? And what is keeping you going? We asked a few colleagues.
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Eduard van de Bilt and Joke Kardux say goodbye to Leiden
For more than 35 years they helped put American Studies on the map: Joke Kardux and Eduard van de Bilt. This spring, the couple retired. A farewell interview.
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Is a cancer pill a matter of time?
A cancer pill, preferably without severe side effects, is something we’d all welcome. Is it a matter of time before such a pill is a reality? We put this question to three Leiden researchers and asked how they themselves are contributing to new cancer treatments.
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A treasure trove of legal data
Data science offers great opportunities for legal research, according to Simone van der Hof and Bart Custers (eLaw). But at the same time, we have to keep an eye on the unwanted side effects of big data - such as ethnic profiling.
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Doctor of tropical medicine on Terschelling
Operating on tsunami victims, coordinating emergency aid during a civil war and the croaking of frogs in the surgery: Menno Swier worked as a doctor of tropical medicine in Papua New Guinea and Indonesia. He is now a GP on Terschelling and here too there is never a dull moment.
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European foreign policy after a crisis: change and continuity
‘Crisis and change in European Union foreign policy.’ That is the title of Nikki Ikani’s book that was published last month. We asked the writer five questions about her book. Presentation: 5 & 20 April.
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Finding planets outside our solar system with radio astronomy
Lecture, This Week's Discoveries
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Marine bacteria hold the key to a sustainable future
Lecture, This Week's Discoveries
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Development of healthy food additives using data science
Lecture, This Week's Discoveries
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an establish’d maxim in metaphysics...”: Modal Epistemology and Hume’s Other Principle’
Lecture
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Predators make it harder for herbivores to adapt to global warming
Lecture, This Week's Discoveries
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AI helps us find aminoacids in space
Lecture, This Week's Discoveries
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The "Serpent of the Desert" and the "Lion’s Whelp": Transformations of Christian Apocalypticism and Interreligious Polemics
Lecture, FLARe lecture series
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Tumen: The Psychological Impact of Border Changes Depicted in Zhang Lu’s Tumen River (2011)
Lecture
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The Art of War by Other Means: Sayyid Nūr Allāh Shūshtarī’s Polemics in Defence of Shiʿi Islam between Ottoman, Safavid and Mughal Empires
Lecture
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AI & Data Science @ Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
Lecture, Webinar
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AI & Data Science @ Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
Lecture, Webinar
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Frederik van Oudenhoven presents the documentary film Wisdom of the Mountains
Lecture
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AI & Data Science @ Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences
Lecture, Webinar
- Language Policy and Practices Series
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Hall of Fame 2015
Many of our staff and students have won prizes over the past year. Others have been awarded a subsidy, or, because of their eminence in their field, they have been appointed member of an academic society or have taken on a position in the community. Reasons enough to be proud of them and to include…
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Dabke Dance
Festival, Middle Eastern Culture Market 2019
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Measurement Numeracy Education for Prospective Elementary School Teachers
PhD Defence
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Education for Life in Africa
Conference
- FGGA Research Seminars
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Toward Consilience in our Accounting of Human Laughter and Humor
Lecture
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Archaeology Today
Festival
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Migration aspirations and preferences to stay in a Brazilian frontier town: tranquility, hope and relative endowment
Lecture, Leiden Interdisciplinary Migration Seminar (LIMS)
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CANCELLED: Human Exposure to Heat
Lecture, Lecture is in English
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The Paippalādasaṃhitā of the Atharvaveda
PhD Defence
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A sense of society
PhD Defence
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The People in Between: Education, Desire, and South Koreans in Contemporary China
PhD Defence
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Endophenotype Research in Psychiatric Genetics: Genetic architecture and reproducibility
Lecture
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Open Day Old Observatory
Open Dag
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Heritage Languages in the Netherlands
Conference
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Family as a language policy regime: power, agency and negotiations at home
Lecture, Sociolinguistics series
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Turkey and Iran in the 1970s and a Comparative Analysis the Activist Women's Experiences
PhD Defence
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March
All coronavirus updates released in March 2021
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‘It’s the people, stupid!’ Jonathan Hopkin on populism and party system change
Lecture