Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
The Nuffield Department of Women’s & Reproductive Health (NDWRH) is seeking a motivated Postdoctoral Research Assistant in Ovarian Cancer Biology. The project models tumour development as an
-
of) a PhD or DPhil in a relevant discipline (such as Biochemistry, Pharmacology, Molecular and Cell Biology or Natural Sciences) and have proven recent experience in the field of cardiovascular biology
-
About the role Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Organic Chemistry to work under the supervision of Professor Véronique Gouverneur for a period of up to 12 months
-
genomics/transcriptomics, computational biology and machine learning. The overarching aim of the project is to develop strategies to treat patients with rare genetic disorders at scale. Duties will include
-
We are seeking a full-time Postdoctoral Research Associate (PDRA) to join the Environmental and Biological Systems Engineering research group at the Department of Engineering Science (central Oxford
-
We are seeking to appoint a Research Associate in Complexity Economics to lead and support a range of research, modelling, and data analysis efforts, all geared towards applying complexity economics
-
About the role Applications are invited for a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Inorganic Chemistry to work under the supervision of Professor Dermot O’Hare (P.I.) in collaboration with Professor
-
://kirrander.web.ox.ac.uk. About you Applicants must hold a PhD in Chemistry or a relevant subject area (or be close to completion) prior to taking up the appointment. The research requires experience in excited-state
-
hold a PhD in Chemistry, Physics, or a related subject area, (or be close to completion) prior to taking up your appointment. The research requires experience with DNA nanotechnology techniques. You
-
to study the roles of ADP-ribosylation and/or ubiquitylation signalling in DNA damage and/or nucleic acid immunity responses (Suskiewicz et al, Nature, 2020; Dukic et al, Science Advances, 2023; Kar et al