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Friday, May 16, 2008

Germany: PhD Student Position - Regulation of Gene Expression

The Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry is one of the leading research institutes within the fields of biochemistry, cell- and structural biology, and biomedicine. With its ten scientific departments, sixteen junior research groups, and a staff of around 800 people, the institute is one of the largest institutes within the Max Planck Society.

PhD student position - Regulation of Gene Expression (Guido Posern)Our junior group is seeking an enthusiastic PhD student who has an overall interest in signal transduction, mammalian cell biology, and cancer. We are working on a novel actin-dependent signalling pathway which directly regulates transcription (Trends Cell Biol. 16: 588 (2006); J. Cell Science 121:1025 (2008)). The aim is to understand the ins and outs of this actin-MAL pathway, especially in epithelial cells and during tumor progression.

Available DFG funded projects include the molecular analysis of the regulatory mechanism as well as the cellular function, including target gene characterisation. For further information see our webpage.

Depending on qualifications remuneration of up to group 13/2 TVöD (public service payment tariff scale) is possible.
The Max Planck Society seeks to increase the number of women in those areas where they are underrepresented and therefore explicitly encourages women to apply.
The Max Planck Society is committed to employing more disabled individuals and especially encourages them to apply.
The Institute offers excellent scientific facilities with state-of-art equipment, top seminar programs, a dynamic and international environment and a lively city at the foot of the Alps. To apply, please send by E-mail your complete application, including certificates, research abstract(s) and the names and addresses of 1-2 academic referees.
Dr. Guido Posern
E-mail: posern(at)biochem.mpg.de

Max Planck Institute of Biochemistry
Am Klopferspitz 18
D-82152 Martinsried
Germany
Web: Regulation of Gene Expression (Guido Posern)

Netherlands: PhD Position Governance of International Research Collaboration

PhD position
Governance of International Research Collaboration

Project & Function

In certain areas of scientific research, major cognitive breakthroughs are stimulated at the intersection of established scientific disciplines and across fundamental and applied technological research, and they are often performed in diverse institutional environments. A preceding research project showed that “heterogeneous research cooperation” across different institutions and organisations in the German research system (mainly universities, Max-Planck-Institutes, Helmholtz Centres, Fraunhofer Institutes) is a constitutive characteristic of emerging fields like nano S&T (the field studied in the project). Heterogeneous cooperation is even more an issue when collaboration is crossing national borders. Here, research actors are confronted with diverse institutional environments and cultures which might have a triggering or retarding impact on effective research. In international collaboration the meso-governance of research becomes a highly complex issue; this holds in particular given the many changes and “reforms” implemented not only in the German but also in various other national research systems. Hence, a central question for the second phase of the project is how increasing international collaboration in public research, particularly in Europe, can be explained and understood from a meso-level institutional perspective that takes into account recent changes in governance structures.

Profile

The ideal candidates hold a master’s degree (or equivalent) in political science, administrative science, sociology, or political economy. You have an interest in/experience with empirical studies on governance issues as well as on scientific research as a social process. You also possess a mix of research skills, good communication skills and fluency in English.

Employment conditions

We offer a very challenging position in an inspiring environment, both the STeHPS department and the DFG-funded group ‘Governance of Research’. As a PhD candidate you will be appointed in a full-time position for a period of four years (38 hours a week), at the end of which you must have completed your PhD thesis. The gross monthly salary for a PhD increases from € 2000 in the first year to € 2612 in the final year (in accordance with the Collective Labour Agreement for Dutch Universities). In addition, the University of Twente offers additional attractive employment conditions. We provide a PhD educational programme within the research school WTMC (Netherlands Graduate School of Science, Technology and Modern Culture).

For more information on this position you can contact Prof. dr. Stefan Kuhlmann, phone: 053-4892627, e-mail: s.kuhlmann@utwente.nl. You can send your application including a full resume (including a list of your education, publications, research, industry and teaching experience), possibly with references, before 30 May 2008 to the University of Twente, School of Management and Governance, Attn: Prof. Dr. P.J.J.M. van Loon, Dean, P.O. Box 217, 7500 AE Enschede, the Netherlands, stating application number 08/135. You can also send your application by email to MBSollicitaties@mb.utwente.nl. For further details relating to this position, see www.mb.utwente.nl/vacatures or http://www.mb.utwente.nl/stehps/about/.

France: PhD Position in Anisothermal Turbulent two-phase flows

PhD position in anisothermal turbulent two-phase flows The research on the interaction between a spray and a hot wall is related to several application fields. In the context of the nuclear safety, this interaction is one of the key phenomenon for the cooling of a Pressurized Water Reactor (PWR) core in case of evaporation of the primary coolant due to an accidental pipe break. We consider vapor-droplet flow through a bundle of ballooned fuel rods, their wall being at a relatively high temperature.

The PhD work will be focused on the multi-scale analysis of this flow in view of its numerical simulation. According to the size of the system studied, the use of the RANS (Reynolds Averaged Navier-Stokes) approach to solve the flow is targeted. In this approach, phenomena at the droplet scale are not solved but rather modeled. The main goal will thus be to study their modeling -in the RANS framework- taking special care of their interaction with turbulence and thermal gradients. The PhD student will first rank by importance the different local phenomena: turbulent fluctuations, evaporation, coalescence, break-up, radiative heat transfer, droplet hydrodynamics. The wall-droplet interaction is currently studied by a PhD student in the LEIDC laboratory team at the IRSN. Secondly, the PhD student will improve the averaged models of mass, momentum and heat transfers through the flow. The interaction between turbulence and phase-change should deeply affect these transfers. We expect in particular the currently existing models not to be well suited to predict the turbulent fields “seen” by the droplets in presence of phase change. Finally, the improved models will be assessed using numerical simulations of fuel rod bundle cooling experiments.

Location : LEIDC at the IRSN (Aix en Provence - France)
PROMES, CNRS, UPR 8521 (Perpignan - France)

Advisor : Pr. Françoise Daumas-Bataille (PROMES)

Application and Contacts

Sweden: PhD position in Materials Science and Engineering

PhD position in Materials Science and Engineering, closing date 2008-05-28The PhD will be a part of the Graduate School in Space Technology at Luleå University of Technology.

Project description: Synthesizing and characterization of titanium alloys
The project will focus on a new modification of the well known titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V (titanium alloyed with 6 % aluminium and 4 % vanadium), where an addition of a small percentage of boron has been added. The mechanical properties of cast titanium are then increased significantly. The project will start with a thorough literature survey of the relatively new area. A controlled heat-treatment of cast Ti-6Al-4V with and without addition of boron will be performed in order to study how the microstructure and especially grain size will depend on the heat-treatment. The aim is to link the different microstructures with mechanical properties, such as for example tensile- and bending test at ambient, cryogenic or elevated temperatures.

The project will be performed in collaboration with Volvo Aero Corporation, Trollhättan, Sweden.

A candidate should have documented basic knowledge in material science, such as a Master degree in Materials Science (or equivalent degree).

Interested candidates should submit their applications marked with reference number 1380-08, including CV and university transcripts (courses/grades record) to the Registrar, Luleå University of Technology, 971 87 Luleå, or by e-mail to registrator@ltu.se.

Last day of application is: 28th of May, 2008.

For more information
contact Marta-Lena.Antti@ltu.se, phone-number 0920-492093.

Norway: Ph.D Position Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU)

NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Faculty of Natural Sciences and Technology - Department of Materials Science and EngineeringPh.D position in the area Steel for Arctic Applications

A PhD research fellowship is available at the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Technology, Department of Materials Science and Engineering, in the area Steel for Arctic Applications. The fellowship is financed by Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU). The candidate who receives the fellowship is expected to fulfil the requirements for a PhD degree at NTNU during the period of the grant.

The Norwegian government has pointed out the North region as one of the most important strategic areas for development in the coming years. The present PhD project is organized under a larger institutional strategic program (ISP) that is established to follow up this national strategy, focusing on petroleum production and related activities in the North. Steel alloys are by far the most commonly used metals in oil and gas production installations, and in cold environments, many low-alloy steels become brittle. The aim of the PhD project is to achieve knowledge on mechanisms and microstructures that affect the ductile-to-brittle transition of steels for arctic applications.

The transition temperature of structural materials is the temperature at which there occurs a sudden drop in the failure energy caused by a change of fracture mechanism from void coalescence to cleavage. Even though the change of fracture properties at low temperatures has been known for more than a century, some of the fundamentals controlling the transformation temperature have not yet been adequately explained. Parameters that affect this transition are e.g. the chemical composition of the steel, its microstructure (grain size, phase composition, morphology of pearlite/ cementite, slag particles like MnS, etc.), crystallographic texture, aging, cold deformation, surface notches, geometrical conditions, loading history, and the occurrence of deformation twinning (nucleating cleavage) prior to final fracture. Moreover, welding introduces new chemical compositions (filler metal) and changes in microstructure (HAZ). Due to these complex relations there is a lack of standards and specifications for structural installations at arctic temperatures. There is a need for a deeper understanding of the factors that influence the brittle-to-ductile transition temperature to (i) provide background knowledge for steel development, (ii) for making standards and specifications for oil and gas installations under arctic conditions (e.g. welding procedures), and (iii) for avoiding brittle fracture due to extreme ice interactions (cold deformation introduced by ice loadings may enhance the risk for subsequent brittle fracture through an increase in the brittle-to-ductile temperature). The PhD work will focus on the effect of microstructure and changes in microstructure introduced by welding (and possibly by cold deformation) on the brittle-to-ductile transition temperature. The experimental work will be based on steels that have been developed for application at low temperatures, e.g. acicular ferritic steels that have a low transition temperature due to their small grain size, but also typical ship plate steels. Steels with varying composition, thermomechanical history and microstructure will be included in the investigation, and changes in their microstructure will be introduced by weld simulation (and perhaps by cold deformation). Fracture toughness will be measured both by traditional Charpy-V testing and by more localized methods as short bar fracture toughness measurements. Related work is already in progress at NTNU and SINTEF in a large KMB project on Arctic Steels, and the candidate will become a member of this environment, which is internationally recognized.

We seek a candidate with

* an MSc or equivalent degree in materials science , physics or chemistry.
* Previous experience with steels and electronoptical techniques, especially transmission electron microscopy, is desirable.
* The candidate may be asked to perform part of her/his research outside of Norway, at laboratories specializing in one or more areas on interest for the project.

For further information, contact:
Professor Jan Ketil Solberg, tel: +47 73592051, e-mail: jan.solberg@material.ntnu.no

Information on the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, NTNU can be found at www.material.ntnu.no

The Department of Materials Science and Engineering has an active and successful graduate student programme. The close links with the academic and technical staff within related units at NTNU offers excellent possibilities for interdisciplinary research.

NTNU’s PhD-rules require a master degree or equivalent with at least 5 years of studies and an average grade of A or B within a scale of A-E for passing grades (A best). Candidates from universities outside Norway are kindly requested to send a Diploma Supplement or a similar document, which describes in detail the study and grade system and the rights for further studies associated with the obtained degree.

The salary for the position is set at level 43, NOK 325.600 a year (before tax) in the Norwegian state salary scale. Two per cent of the salary will be deducted at source as a mandatory premium to the Norwegian State Pension Fund.

The fellowship is for a period of four years, including 25 % teaching duties.

NTNU’s objective is to increase the number of females in scientific positions. Female applicants are therefore encouraged to apply.

The appointment of the Ph.D. fellow will be made according to Norwegian guidelines for universities and university colleges, and to the general regulations for university employees in Norway. Applicants are obliged to engage on an organized Ph.D. training program, and appointment requires approval of the applicant’s plan for a Ph.D. study. The Fellow and the University must sign a mutual contract regarding the period of appointment and the obligations of the Ph.D. fellow.

The application should submit the following documents:

* CV (Resume) including research experience and publications, education, experience, certificates, transcripts and references.
* Information, publications and all other scientific material that the applicant wants to be considered can also be enclosed.

Applications are to be sent electronically with the reference number NT 32/08.

Preferably, we want the attachments in one file.

Publications and other scientific materials must be sent by ordinary mail to:

the Norwegian University of Science and Technology Faculty of Natural Sciences and Technology NO-7491 Trondheim Norway.

The file number for the position NT-32/08 is to be clearly stated on the application. These papers will only be returned on inquiry.

The application deadline is 30.05.2008.

Switzerland: PhD Student Position ETH Zurich

We are looking for a highly motivated PhD student to join an interdisciplinary project cluster on the processes of initial soil formation in an alpine glacier forefield.The PhD project addresses the most important gaps in the biogeochemical knowledge of weathering processes that are crucial for the supply of nutrients required by the pioneering life. The main objectives are focused on the processes at the mineral-water-biota interfaces.
The interdisciplinary approach of the project requires strong interests in environmental geochemistry, microbiology and mineralogy.

Education The successful candidate must have a master degree, diploma or equivalent degree in geosciences, environmental sciences, chemistry, or microbiology.
Fluent proficiency in English is highly desirable.

The position is build o a collaboration between the groups of Environmental Geochemistry (Gerhard Furrer)
http://www.ibp.ethz.ch/people/gerhardf/index
Environmental Engineering and Clay Mineralogy (Michael Plötze)
http://www.igt.ethz.ch/get.asp?name=plötze
Environmental Microbiology and Biotechnology (Helmut Brandl):
http://www.unizh.ch/uwinst/index.php?site=research/groups/HelmiGroup

Contact address Prof. Gerhard Furrer, ETH Zurich, Institute of Biogeochemistry and Pollutant Dynamics, CHN F 50.2, CH-8092 Zurich, Switzerland
Email gerhard.furrer@env.ethz.ch
http://www.ethz.ch

Switzerland: PhD Position University of Lausanne

A PhD position is open for a collaborative project between the labs of Prof. Marc Robinson-Rechavi (Evolutionary Bioinformatics) and Prof. Sven Bergmann (Computational Biology). The project concerns the comparative modular analysis of gene expression in vertebrate development. The student will work with, and improve, computational methods of microarray analysis from the Bergmann lab, and ontology alignment methods from the Robinson-Rechavi lab, and apply them to publicly available data.The project will shed light on the fundamentally modular nature of the regulation of development in animals, and its evolution. Methodological advances of general use are also expected.

We are looking for an autonomous and ambitious student, with a strong mathematical background (physicists, computer scientists, engineers), and knowledge of biology. Previous experience with evolutionary and/or developmental biology is a plus but not a requirement. Willingness to work with real (and often noisy and complex) biological data is necessary. Fluency in English is a requirement.

Please send a CV and contact information of two references to marc.robinson-rechavi”at”unil.ch

Websites for additional information:
http://serverdgm.unil.ch/bergmann/
http://www.unil.ch/dee/page22707.html
http://bgee.unil.ch/

http://www.unil.ch/dee/page22707.html

Thursday, May 15, 2008

UK: Northumbria University PhD Research Studentship

School of the Built Environment

Applications are invited for a PhD studentship funded by the EPSRC in the following research area:

Modelling of energy use in buildings, utilising future weather data predictions

Project to start: 4th August 2008

Project background:

This project is part of a large consortium of universities (Manchester, Sheffield, Bath, Northumbria and Napier) developing next generation tools and techniques to enable architects and engineers responsible for the built environment to mitigate and adapt to the worst effects of climate change. A central aspect of the work will be developing building-relevant climate change data from new data to be released by the UK Climate Impacts Programme (UKCIP08) which is led by the University of Manchester. PhD studentships are available at all partner universities with individual programmes of work.

The main objectives of the research at Northumbria are:

1. To review examples of best practice in climate-mitigating building design and develop priorities for future building design approaches.
2. To adapt an existing modelling tool with particular emphasis on responsive plant, controls and embedded renewable energy systems capable of meeting the challenge implied by (1).
3. To test and evaluate the modelling tool on a variety of building case studies making use of the weather data sets emerging from the collaborators.

This part of the collaborative programme will involve close collaboration with two key stakeholders: a sample of building design professionals; and a building modelling software developer. A key deliverable will be a modelling tool capable of predicting building energy and environmental performance over an extended timeline and responsive to the needs of design practitioners.

The studentship:

This EPSRC Studentship covers home/EU tuition fees and a stipend of £12,940 (tax free) per annum. Overseas students are eligible to apply, but will be expected to pay the difference between home/EU and overseas fees (currently around £5,900 p.a.) and have an English Language Qualification, IELTS of no less than 6.5 or its equivalent.

The successful candidate will join a large and vibrant community of research students and staff and be based in our newly-created Research Hub at the School of the Built Environment(www.northumbria.ac.uk/be ). The School is one of the largest providers of built environment higher education and consultancy in the UK supported by research themes in building and renewable energy, construction management, virtual reality, urban design, and public policy for sustainability.

Applications:

Candidates should hold a first or upper second class honours degree in an engineering discipline, a physical science, computer science or a related subject and have a keen interest in simulation and mathematical modelling.

Interested applicants should send a CV and covering letter to Elaine Ryder, Senior Research Administrator, School of the Built Environment, Ellison Building, University of Northumbria, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST or email: elaine.ryder@northumbria.ac.uk. For further details and an informal discussion about the project, contact Professor Chris Underwood on +44(0)191 227 3533 or email: chris.underwood@northumbria.ac.uk.

The deadline for applications is the 30th of June 2008.

Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Norway: PhD Positions in Informatics, University of Oslo

Up to 11 Ph.D.-positons are available at the Department of Informatics, University of Oslo (UiO).

The positions have a duration of 4 years with 25% compulsory work (teaching).

Up to three of the positions (Ref.no.: 2008/7711) will be held open for the most qualified applicants within the total field for research at the department. The others are reserved for the following more specific areas.:

  • Formal Methods (Ref.no.: 2008/7712)
  • Global Infrastructures (Ref.no.: 2008/7714)
  • Image formation and analysis (seismic and sonar) (Ref.no.: 2008/7718)
  • Natural Language Processing (Ref.no.: 2008/7722)
  • Nanoelectronics (Ref.no.: 2008/7726)
  • Network and Distributed Systems, middleware and algorithms (Ref.no.: 2008/7727)
  • Robotics and Intelligent Systems (Ref.no.: 2008/7728)
  • Computational Mathematics (Ref.no:2008/7729)


For a closer description of the overall research and the different research groups of the department, see here.

The purpose of the PhD position is research training leading to the successful completion of a doctoral degree. The fellowship requires admission to the research-training programme at the Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences. Applicants must have obtained undergraduate (BSc level or equivalent) and graduate (MSc level or equivalent) qualifications. (Applicants may forward transcripts from exams in June 2008).

Altogether this should represent approximately five years of full time study after the completion of European Upper Secondary School or International Baccalaureate. For more information see this page.

Appointment to a research fellowship is conditional upon admission to the research training programme. An approved plan for the research training must be submitted no later than one month after taking up the position, and admission approved within three months. For more information see this page.

The University of Oslo wishes to achieve a more equal distribution of scientific employees between the genders. Female applicants are encouraged to apply.

All new UiO employees are required to sign an agreement regulating research intellectual property rights (IPR).

For any additional information please do not hesitate to contact:
Head of Department, professor Morten Dæhlen, email: mortend[ at ]ifi.uio.no, phone: (+47) 2284 0125 or
Administrative Head of Department, Narve Trædal, email: narvet[ at ]ifi.uio.no, phone: (+47) 2285 2418.

Salary: LTR 44 –48 (NOK 331400 – 355,200), depending on qualifications.

Deadline for applications: 13 June 2008

The applications (in English or in a Scandinavian language) marked with reference number including a curriculum vitae and complete information about the applicant’s education (both at the bachelor and master level), job experience, scientific publications, outline of research ambitions, and at least two academic references (name, position, email, and telephone number), should be sent to:

The University of Oslo
The Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences
Grete Andresen
Boks 1032 Blindern
N-0315 Oslo, Norway.

E-mail: grete.andresen[ at ]matnat.uio.no
Application papers will not be returned, with the exception of original publications.

Via: official announcement

Ireland: PhD Position in Physics of Nanostructures, Tyndall National Institute

A new group (Epitaxy and Physics of Nanostructures) was established in January 2007 at Tyndall National Institute (http://www.tyndall.ie) under an SFI (http://www.sfi.ie/home/index.asp) Principal Investigator grant. The group is led by Dr. E. Pelucchi. The research will concentrate on the epitaxy, optical properties and spectroscopy of site controlled Pyramidal quantum dots and wires [1] and on their extension to telecommunication wavelengths.

This novel approach to site controlled quantum wires and dots (QD) growth has been pioneered by Dr Pelucchi in the group of Prof Kapon in EPFL, using MOVPE growth on a pre-patterned substrate to achieve reproducible QD emission spectra with, for example, the lowest inhomogeneous broadening to date for a QD epitaxial field. The high level of growth control makes such nanostructures ideal candidates for studies and devices related to quantum communication/information processing (efficient single photon emission being a good example), enabling the achievement of atom-like energy states whose energy and electronic wavefunction can be engineered at the nanoscale level by acting on a few parameters, so that the dots can, in principle, be individually and unambiguously (optically and electrically) addressed and controlled.

[1] M. Baier, E. Pelucchi, S. Watanabe, and E. Kapon, Appl. Phys. Lett. 84, 1943 (2004); M. Merano, S. Sonderegger, A. Crottini, S. Collin, P. Renucci, E. Pelucchi, A. Malko, M. Baier, E. Kapon, B. Deveaud, J-D. Ganière, Nature 438, 479 (2005); Q. Zhu, E. Pelucchi, S. Dalessi, K. Leifer, M.-A. Dupertuis and E. Kapon, Nano Lett. 6, 1036 (2006).

The PhD position is open for candidates of EU nationalities. We welcome applications from talented candidates with strong motivation and experimental skills.

Application
Please email or send (max 500 kB) a CV with the address of at least one reference to:

Dr. Emanuele Pelucchi, SFI Principal Investigator
Tyndall National Institute, Lee Maltings, Cork, Ireland
Email: emanuele.pelucchi[ at ]tyndall.ie

Netherlands : Two PhD-Researchers

VU University Amsterdam Faculty of Arts

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Denmark: Technical University of Denmark PhD Student - New Sol-Gel coatings to improve casting quality

Department of Mechanical Engineering

As part of a research project: “New Sol-Gel coatings to improve casting quality” the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the Technical University of Denmark invite applications for a position as Ph.D. student.

The Department of Mechanical Engineering has a staff of about 220 persons and covers research and education in the areas of Materials Science and Engineering, Process Technology, Process modeling, Structural engineering, Thermodynamics and Fluid Mechanics.

The project is funded by the Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation. It is a joint research project between the Department of Mechanical Engineering at DTU and the Materials Division, Sol-Gel group at the Technological Institute in co-operation with several industrial partners in Scandinavia. These groups have a good, long standing co-operation and have a good research environment with several Ph.D.’s and Post Doc.’s and considerable industrial contacts.

The project is experimentally based with the main objective to develop and test new surface coatings for moulds and cores used to produce complex, high integrity castings.

The work will involve manufacture of coatings, test of the coatings in the laboratory and analysis of thermal and mechanical properties of the coatings when they are in contact with liquid metals.

Candidates should have a Master's degree in engineering or a similar degree equivalent to the Master's degree in engineering for the PhD.

The scholarships for the PhD degree are subject to academic approval, and the candidate will be enrolled in one of the general degree programmes of DTU. Information about the general requirements for enrolment and the general planning of the scholarship studies is included in the general rules of DTU, which may be obtained by application to the PhD programme office at tel: +45 45 25 11 76 or +45 45 25 11 77.

The salary and conditions of employment are according to the current rules for Postdoctoral and PhD students. Further information is available at www.dtu.dk.

Further information may be obtained from Associate Professor Niels Skat Tiedje, tel.: +45 45 25 47 19. E-mail: nt@ipl.dtu.dk.

All interested candidates irrespective of age, gender, race, religion or ethnic background are requested to apply.

The application with enclosures in triplicate hard copy must be received no later than May 30, 2008 at 12.00 noon and sent to:

Associate Professor Niels Skat Tiedje
Att.: Anette Kaltoft, room 018
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Technical University of Denmark
Building 425
DK-2800 Kgs. Lyngby
Denmark

Netherlands : PhD position Pharmaceutical, Medical or Life Sciences

University of Groningen

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Netherlands : Phd Student

University of Amsterdam The Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences

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Netherlands : PhD Student

University of Amsterdam Faculty of Law

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Netherlands: Phd Student in Micro-Nano Interface Fracture Characterisation

Delft University of Technology Mechanical, Maritime and Materials Engineering

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Netherlands: PhD Studentship Tribology of Fiber Reinforced Elastomers and Thermoplastics

University of Twente Engineering Technology

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Netherlands: PhD Governance of International Research Collaboration

University of Twente School of Management Governance (MB)

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Netherlands: Genetic Epidemiologist (Post-Doc or PhD)

ICIN

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Netherlands: PhD position Food Safety Management Strategies

Agrotechnology & Food Sciences Group

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Netherlands : Ph.D Candidate Operating Systems Research f/m

VU University Amsterdam Faculty of Sciences

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Netherlands :Ph.D. and Postdoc position in Biomedical Optics f/m

VU University Amsterdam Faculty of Sciences

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