249 search results for “rigid folding” in the Public website
-
Back to university: ‘A bit apprehensive but mostly pleased’
After almost 18 months of following lectures alone in their rooms, many students are going back to face-to-face classes for the first time. And the same is true for the lecturers. How do people feel about it? We went to Leiden Law School to find out. ‘For a whole year, I’ve been watching lectures in…
-
'Dionysus never looked so beautiful'
The renovated National Museum of Antiquities will re-open for the public on 15 December. Conservator Ruurd Halbertsma, Leiden Professor of Archaeology, explains why the renovation was needed: 'More visible cohesion between cultures, more context and more artistic lighting.'
-
LION Image Awards
On 15 January, the winner of the famed LION Image Award will be announced. Submissions ranged from the famous 3d printed microboat to an eerily abstract graph depicting a Majorana fermion.
-
Unraveling the mysteries of Multiple Sclerosis
Leiden chemists discovered a new mechanism which might explain how multiple sclerosis shifts to a more severe form. Their findings contribute to unravelling the mysterious course of the disease. They have published their findings in the journal Biochemistry.
-
Invisible but ever-present: female spies in the 17th century
For a long time it was thought that there were few or no female spies in history. However, nothing could be further from the truth. In her book Invisible Agents, Nadine Akkerman reconstructs the stories of the many British women spies in the 17th century.
-
Rise of drones necessitates revision of laws of war
Nowadays, it is almost impossible to imagine warfare without unmanned aerial vehicles, or drones. For instance, they have been deployed in the war in Iraq and Afghanistan. Are the current laws of war adequate to address the use of drones? PhD candidate James Welch will defend his thesis on 21 March.
-
Three LUF grants for talented Leiden Science researchers
Fighting against cancer, antibiotic resistance and disposable plastics: Ahmed Ali, Fredj Ben Bdira, and Valerio Barbarossa receive a LUF grant for their innovative and socially relevant research. These grants for academic talent are often an important step towards grants by NWO and other grant insti…
-
Discoverer of the Year bridges science and medicine
Fascinated by science since high school, Alireza Mashaghi Tabari is driven to explore new ways of thinking in medicine. With a strong academic network, he educates students and gives public lectures. For his research at LACDR, he won the C.J. Kok Public Award 2018, making him the Faculty of Science's…
-
FameLab: young scientists take the stage
In FameLab contestants explain their research to the public in a three-minute presentation – without using PowerPoint or other presentation tools. The Leiden heats of this international communications competition will be held on 7 March. Anyone is welcome to come and watch!
-
Tracing human mobility across the Caribbean
What are the patterns and processes of human mobility in the pre-colonial circum-Caribbean as revealed by burial populations and what are the underlying motives and socio-cultural principles on both micro- and macro-scales?
-
The effects of hormone replacement therapy on the speech of transgender men
Lecture, Sociolinguistics Series
- ISGA Research Seminar Series 2022
-
Van Leeuwenhoek Lecture on BioScience: DNA Sequencing Technology
Lecture
-
Opening 2016-2017 Academic Year Institute for Philosophy
Lecture
-
Offensive Cyber Operations: Understanding Intangible Warfare
Lecture
-
Leadership in Agile Organisations
Course, Workshop
-
Monument of Nature?
PhD Defence
-
Unifying species of C-agreement
Lecture, Com(parative) Syn(tax) series
-
It is Greenish or it Wiggles: Engineering Aristotelian Meaning
Lecture, LUCL Colloquium Series
-
Engineering meaning
Lecture
-
Peculiarities in Persianate Painting
LUCIS What's New Lecture
-
'Periodisation and the Futuh: Making Sense of Muhammad’s Leadership of the Conquests in non-Muslim Sources'
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! series
-
LIMS talk
Lecture, LIMS seminar
-
In pictures: animal mummies in a scanner
The story of Tutankhamun, the Egyptian pharaoh, is world famous. But did you know that the Ancient Egyptians mummified not only people but animals too? The National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden recently put a bunch of animal mummies through a CT scanner. This was in collaboration with Canon Netherlands…
-
Why the WTO ban on China’s export duties should be ‘greened’
China is prohibited from using export duties to address any environmental problems. This is unfortunate, according to PhD candidate Fengan Jiang (Richard), as export duties could be useful in tackling global carbon leakage. PhD defence on 19 February 2020.
-
This Week’s Discoveries | 30 May 2017
Lecture
-
Photo-Writing
Lecture, The 9th Adriaan Gerbrands Lecture
-
Political Science Lunch Research Seminar: Political Parties or Party Systems? Assessing the ‘Myth’ of Institutionalisation and Democracy
Lecture
-
CANCELLED Violence and the State: Perspectives from Ancient India
Due to COVID this event has been cancelled Locating the intersections between the theory and practice of political violence involves identifying the ways in which violence was folded into the structures of state and society, and the multiple, changing discourses around its forms and manifestations.…
-
Chemical Biology Lecture: Dr. Tom Wennekes
Lecture
-
This Week’s Discoveries | 22 March 2016
Lecture
-
The Emergence of Democratic Firms in the Platform Economy: Drivers, Obstacles, and the Path Ahead
PhD Defence
- Leiden Lecture Series in Japanese Studies
-
Tactile gaze | sensorial practices through dance and reading
Arts and leisure, Arts and leisure
-
Signs of life – Life, Living and Death in Modern and Contemporary Continental Philosophy
Conference
-
Thriller writer Jeroen Windmeijer: books have their own truth
With cultural anthropology alumnus Jeroen Windmeijer, Leiden has added another writer to the fold. Following the success of his religious-historical thrillers, he has been able to call himself a full-time writer since 1 January 2019. ‘Not a true story but still true.’
-
Annetje Ottow back in Leiden
Annetje Ottow is the first female president of the Executive Board of Leiden University, which means a return to her Alma mater.
-
SSNMR Lecture - Molecular disease mechanisms in neurodegeneration: solid-state NMR studies of protein aggregation and mitochondrial lipid oxidation
Lecture
-
This Week's Discoveries | 29 October 2019
Lecture
-
12th Siebold Conference Leiden
Conference
-
Technical research on bronze images from Indonesia’
Lecture, Friends of the Kern Institute lecture
-
Launch James Webb telescope - lectures by Ewine van Dishoeck and Bernhard Brandl
Lecture
- Volume 7 (2012)
-
Theses
Full texts of all bachelor, master and PhD theses are available on this site
-
This Week’s Discoveries | 28 January 2020
Lecture
-
Ada Lovelace Distinguished Lecture Series
Lecture
-
Online exhibition
TEXTS FROM ANCIENT EGYPT. Highlights from the Collection of the Leiden Papyrological Institute. Online exhibition on the occasion of the 80th anniversary of the foundation ‘Het Leids Papyrologisch Instituut’ in 2015.
-
Science and education policy
YAL raises its voice on policy matters.
-
By the rivers of Babylon: New perspectives on Second Temple Judaism from Cuneiform texts
“BABYLON” investigates the extent of the similarities between Babylonian and post-exilic forms of cultic and social organization and explores the question how Babylonian models could have influenced the restoration effort in Jerusalem.