Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Employer
- University of Oslo
- UiT The Arctic University of Norway
- University of Bergen
- Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences
- University of Agder
- University of Agder (UiA)
- NORWEGIAN UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY - NTNU
- University of Stavanger
- NTNU - Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- NTNU Norwegian University of Science and Technology
- University of South-Eastern Norway
- Western Norway University of Applied Sciences
- Nature Careers
- Nord University
- OsloMet
- 5 more »
- « less
-
Field
-
Fellow in Human Geography Apply for this job See advertisement Job description Applicants are invited to apply for a Postdoctoral Fellow position (SKO 1352) at the Department of Sociology and Human
-
20 Mar 2024 Job Information Organisation/Company University of Oslo Research Field Geography » Human geography Researcher Profile Recognised Researcher (R2) Country Norway Application Deadline 30
-
for two years. Your immediate leader is the Head of the Department. About the Department The Department of Interdisciplinary Studies of Culture (KULT ) is part of the Faculty of Humanities at NTNU
-
-year Postdoctoral Research Fellowship (SKO 1352) is available at the Department of Media and Communication , University of Oslo. The position is associated with HumAIn: A humanities hub for the
-
Excellence funded by the Research Council of Norway. This interdisciplinary centre focuses on rhythm as a structuring mechanism for the temporal dimensions of human life. Methods from musicology, psychology
-
, University of Oslo. The position is associated with HumAIn: A humanities hub for the reimagination of AI project (uio.no) , funded by the Faculty of Humanities, University of Oslo. The candidate is expected
-
. The position is associated with HumAIn: A humanities hub for the reimagination of AI project (uio.no) , funded by the Faculty of Humanities, University of Oslo. The candidate is expected to develop a research
-
mechanism for the temporal dimensions of human life. Methods from musicology, psychology, neuroscience, and informatics are combined to study rhythm as a fundamental property that shapes and underpins human
-
), act in various flow regimes. These interacting forces can result in instabilities and emergence of complex patterns. We are particularly interested in frictional fluids and the relationship between
-
., viscous and gravitational forces), act in various flow regimes. These interacting forces can result in instabilities and emergence of complex patterns. We are particularly interested in frictional fluids