2,622 search results for “rare earth elements value chain” in the Public website
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Double Session: Coal and Labor in China & Labour Migration in the Central African Copperbelt
Lecture, Leiden Interdisciplinary Migration Seminar (LIMS)
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This Week’s Discoveries | 29 January 2019
Lecture
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Stephen Ellis Annual Research Lecture: Nanjala Nyabola: African Feminism as Method
Lecture
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China and Iran's Political and Cultural Relations
Conference
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Challenges for the Security and Stability of Cyberspace and their Impact upon Global Stability
Lecture
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The Transatlantic Era 1989-2020: A Textbook Project
Seminar
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The Impediments to Uncovering the Human Rights Dimension of Sino-African Relations
Lecture
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How students incorporate sustainability in their master thesis
Many students are finishing their master thesis on sustainability this summer. In this blog, we reflect on their topics, approaches, and goals by highlighting theses from Governance of Sustainability, European Law, Global Archaeology, Computer Science: Artificial Intelligence, Industrial Ecology, and…
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Book recommendation from ... Jeff Fynn-Paul
Every month a member of the Institute for History tells about a book that he/she has read and that has inspired him/her: from novels to biographies. At the end, the pen is passed on to another colleague. This month Jeff Fynn-Paul tells about a book he has read recently.
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Being an Indonesian PhD in Leiden: what is that like?
Wija Wijayanto and Arum Perwitasari both were Indonesian PhD students at Leiden University, funded by the Leiden-DIKTI Graduate Scholarship Programme. With the help of this scholarship, literally thousands of students travel abroad to write their dissertations. During their research period, Arum and…
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Beyond plastic: why humanities scholars study waste
In a new series of articles, we explore how the humanities study topics related to sustainability. First up: waste. How and why study waste as a humanities scholar? We asked Elena Burgos Martinez, University Lecturer South and Southeast Asian Studies, and Katarzyna Cwiertka, Professor of Modern Japan…
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No moderation in tone at Trump's inauguration
The brand-new American President Donald Trump delivered his inaugural speech on 20 January. There was little sign of conciliation and he was liberal with the truth, in the opinion of a number of Leiden academics. One professor is more positive: 'He wants to take on radical Islam.'
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Being an Indonesian PhD in Leiden: what is that like?
Wija Wijayanto and Arum Perwitasari both were Indonesian PhD students at Leiden University, funded by the Leiden-DIKTI Graduate Scholarship Programme. With the help of this scholarship, literally thousands of students travel abroad to write their dissertations. During their research period, Arum and…
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Reordering the Natural World: Animals, Plants, and the Natural Environment in Early Modern China
Course, Workshop
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Launch James Webb telescope - lectures by Ewine van Dishoeck and Bernhard Brandl
Lecture
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This Week’s Discoveries | 29 May 2018
Lecture
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Fault Lines: Design/ Research Symposium
Arts and culture, Symposium
- Activating 2D materials for CO2 and CO hydrogenation to higher alcohols: predictive modeling meets experiments
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The Role and Relevance of the The Hague International Space Resources Governance Working Group
Conference
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Starquakes and Exoplanets in our Milky Way
Lecture, Oort lecture 2019
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Philippe Van Parijs on Just Europe
Lecture
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This Week’s Discoveries | 17 December 2019
Lecture
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Career College: To PhD or not to PhD?
Career and apply for jobs
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More-than-Planet
Exhibition
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Chemical approaches to control the in vivo behavior of nanomedicines
Lecture, Van Leeuwenhoek Lecture on BioScience
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Cancelled: The Origin of Complex Cells
Lecture, Van Leeuwenhoek Lecture on BioScience
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New linguistic and literary aspects of Italianness / Nuovi aspetti linguistici e letterari dell’italianità
Conference
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Book series
Diplomatic Studies (DIST) is a peer-reviewed book series that encourages original work on the theory and practice, processes and outcomes of diplomacy.
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Splitting and clustering grammatical information
This project focuses on a striking parallelism between two macro-groups of languages: southern Italian dialects and the so-called split-ergative languages, like Basque, Georgian, Dyirbal, Hindi/Urdu.
- Volume 6 (2011)
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Engaging Europe in the Arab World: European missionaries and humanitarianism in the Middle East (1850-1970)
From the mid-19th century until the 1970’s, the Middle East witnessed the presence of various European missionaries who played a fundamental role in the birth and the development of humanitarianism. Since these Christian missionaries were well integrated in the local Middle Eastern societies via their…
- Volume 2 (2007)
- Volume 4 (2009)
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BRASILIAE. Indigenous Knowledge in the Making of Science: Historia Naturalis Brasiliae (1648).
Investigating the intercultural connections that shaped practices of knowledge production in colonial Dutch Brazil.
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Mental wellbeing
You can find some tips here on how to maintain your mental health.
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The recent IPCC report: some reactions from our Liveable planet community
The publication of the recent IPCC report on climate change has not gone unnoticed, to put it mildly, certainly not within the Liveable Planet community.
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Aris Politopoulos: ‘I use games as a teaching method'
In his lectures Aris Politopoulos combines archaeology with video games. He is one of the three nominees for the 2020 LUS Teaching Prize. 'A good teacher is always open to feedback from students.'
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Diversity symposium 2021: small steps can increase inclusion
‘Culture change takes time,’ said Vice-Rector Hester Bijl at the closing panel of the University’s Diversity Symposium on 26 January. She talked about the road to a diverse and inclusive university. The symposium provided plenty of concrete examples of small steps that can already be taken.
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‘A week feels like a month at the National Think Tank’
In the National Think Tank (NDT) 20 young academics spend four months reflecting on how to solve a societal problem. Four participants from Leiden told us about their experience.
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Festival showcases anthropology students’ work: scope of visual ethnography is widening
Visual ethnography has become an integral part of anthropology in Leiden. The students from the master’s specialisation will present their work at the LUVE festival on 8, 9 and 10 October. ‘For a film you have to negotiate with your research participants.’
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Female sexuality in times of social media
Milou Deelen (24) rapidly rose to prominence as the Dutch advocate of frank talk about women’s sexuality. It has cost her dear, but she has received so much assent, praise and support that she won’t be giving up anytime soon. In the Annie Romein Verschoor Lecture on 5 March, Leiden University’s celebration…
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‘It affects me most when children are involved’
It doesn’t take long before Tim van Lit has told us what interests him: problems that shake the nation. This 28-year-old Criminology alumnus heads a team of 25 at Royal Netherlands Marechaussee. Location: Schiphol Airport.
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Leonard Blussé receives prestigious Fukuoka Prize in Japan
Leonard Blussé, Professor Emeritus of History of European-Asian Relations, was awarded the 13th Fukuoka Prize in Japan on 10 September.
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A multi-disciplinary conversation about urban transformation in Turin The case of Mirafiori Sud
This blogpost reports on one of these conversations, which Alessandro Pisano, political science student at the University of Turin, and I had with regards to the transforming neighbourhood of Mirafiori Sud.
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Investigating palaeoclimate variability in the Iberian peninsula during the last glacial period and implications for Neanderthal disappearance
PhD defence
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This Week's Discoveries | 29 October 2019
Lecture
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StepTalk: Mass Starvation: The History and Future of Famine
Debate, StepTalks
- Gas-Induced Segregation in a Pt-Rh Alloy Nanoparticle Revealed by In Situ Coherent X-ray Diffraction Imaging
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Clefts in Tunen: A biclausal account
Lecture, Com(parative) Syn(tax) Series
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LUCIR Lecture: Restraining Great Powers - Soft Balancing from Empires to the Global Era
Lecture