Sort by
Refine Your Search
-
Listed
-
Category
-
Country
-
Program
-
Employer
-
Field
-
The Faculty of Philosophy, University of Oxford, in association with Magdalen College, wishes to appoint a Departmental Lecturer in Philosophy of Language to cover the teaching and other duties of a
-
The Faculty of Philosophy, University of Oxford, in association with Hertford College, wishes to appoint a Departmental Lecturer in Ethics to cover the teaching and other duties of a permanent
-
through teaching and research in the field of Classical Japanese language and literature at Oxford. The successful candidate will also play an active and valued role in the examination and administration
-
based in Visual Computing Group (groups.inf.ed.ac.uk/vico) and will be supervised by Dr. Hakan Bilen. There will be many collaborative opportunities both within the school as well as with the University
-
of Egyptian language. Your knowledge of Middle Egyptian texts and the hieratic script will be sufficient to teach, develop course materials and undertake relevant research. You must have an aptitude
-
The Faculty of Linguistics, Philology and Phonetics is seeking to appoint a Departmental Lecturer to assume teaching and examining responsibilities for one year in the area of Italian Linguistics
-
The Faculty of Medieval and Modern Languages are seeking to appoint a highly organised and proactive Departmental Lecturer in German to join our Friendly team. This post is to cover the absence of the substantive postholder, who is taking a period of leave. The post is available until 30...
-
The Faculty of Philosophy, University of Oxford, in association with Hertford College, wishes to appoint a Departmental Lecturer in Ethics to cover the teaching and other duties of a permanent
-
principally requires expertise in Python programming and strong experience in software development and deployment. Prior experience developing AI applications using large language models would be beneficial. A
-
the interactions and interplay of linguistic and textual material culture in ancient Sicily over a period of 1,500 years. Crossreads builds upon the initial work of the I.Sicily project (http