1,019 search results for “indonesia and japan language and cultural” in the Staff website
-
Guus Kroonen
Faculty of Humanities
-
Nominate students for the ECHO Award 2023
Social
-
Three main results of VVI’s Strengthening Legal Education in Eastern Indonesia (SLEEI)
Although fighting the culture of top-down education and stimulating lecturers’ confidence to adapt courses to local context priorities is no easy job to complete in three years, the “SLEEI inheritance” already has three main components.
- Language and the human past
-
Events in language and cognition
Lecture, LUCL Colloquium series
- Borders Reimagined: Identity, Culture, and Justice in a Globalized World
-
René van Walsem
Faculty of Humanities
-
Attention to education and culture at lowest point in 20 years
After an extensive content analysis of the coalition agreement, a sharp fall can be seen in the focus on education & culture, science & technology and defence. This is the conclusion of university public administration professors Gerard Breeman and Arco Timmermans. They compared the content with all…
-
Order: Public Prosecutors in Post-Authoritarian Countries, the case of Indonesia
On 21 January 2021, Fachrizal Afandi defended his thesis ‘Maintaining Order: Public Prosecutors in Post-Authoritarian Countries, the case of Indonesia’. The doctoral research was supervised by Prof. A.W. Bedner and Prof. J.H. Crijns.
-
Possibly the oldest known piece of figurative art found in Indonesia
A team of researchers has dated a prehistoric painting in Indonesia to at least 51.200 years ago, they have proposed in a study that this painting is the oldest known example of “figurative” art.
-
Experience Day Cultural Anthropology & Development Sociology On Campus
Study information, Experience Day
-
Professor bids farewell with roadshow in Indonesia: 'One big celebration of recognition'
Whereas most outgoing professors are offered a congress, Nico Kaptein's former students and PhD students took a bigger approach. They treated him not only to a farewell congress, but also to a two-week tour of Indonesia, filled with lectures, and trips.
-
Willemijn Heeren
Faculty of Humanities
-
Natasja Delbar
Faculty of Humanities
-
M. Y. Priscilla Lam
Faculty of Humanities
-
Arnout Koornneef
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
Benjamin Suchard
Faculty of Humanities
-
Carmen Kleinherenbrink
Faculty of Humanities
-
The Colonial Era & Contemporary Indonesia
Lecture, Online
-
Nadine Akkerman: ‘It’s an incredible feeling, rewriting such an iconic event from a country’s history.’
Ever since Nadine Akkerman, Professor of Early Modern Literature & Culture, came across a woman spy in her research, secret agents have kept cropping up in her work. Now there’s Spycraft, a popular history book exploring the espionage techniques used by early modern spies, which she has co-written with…
-
Nominate a student for the ECHO Awards 2022
Organisation
-
One history, different memories. Does this always lead to conflict?
Different groups can have different memories of the same historical event. This can lead to conflict but does not have to. How is this, and how can countries and people reconcile with the past?
-
Arend Quak
Faculty of Humanities
-
I-Fan Lin
Science
-
Liza van den Bosch
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
Jiaqi Wang
Faculty of Humanities
-
Saskia Dunn
Faculty of Humanities
-
Suzan Verberne
Science
-
Anouschka van Dijk
Faculteit der Sociale Wetenschappen
-
Tian Yang
Faculty of Humanities
-
Paul van Els
Faculty of Humanities
-
Marc Buijnsters
Faculty of Humanities
-
Owada Chair should bring together nations, cultures and individuals
Dominique Moïsi, a professor at King’s College London, will be the first holder of the Owada chair. ‘In the present international context of polarisation and divisions within societies and amongst nations, any effort at bringing Asia and Europe closer to each other is truly important.’
-
Rik van Gijn
Faculty of Humanities
-
PhD research: Was there already Dutch-Dutch and Belgian-Dutch in the past?
What developments preceded modern Standard Dutch? PhD candidate Iris Van de Voorde conducted research on ‘pluricentricity’, or the idea that language norms arise in different places and spread outwards from there. PhD defence on 19 April.
-
Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade
Faculty of Humanities
-
I-Hsien Lin
Faculty of Humanities
-
Yorum Beekman: ‘I didn’t want to write about people, I wanted to give them a voice’
As a woman, working in Japan and Korea can be pretty tough, Yorum Beekman discovered. It prompted her to pursue a PhD on the subject: ‘I thought: hey, that’s interesting!’
-
Gerlov van Engelenhoven
Faculty of Humanities
-
Bareez Majid
Faculty of Humanities
-
Liesbeth Minnaard
Faculty of Humanities
-
Gül Aktürk Hauser
Faculteit Archeologie
-
Lydia van de Fliert
Faculteit Archeologie
-
Alette Vonk
Faculty of Humanities
-
Bernhard Rieger
Faculty of Humanities
-
Mitchell van Vuren
Faculty of Humanities
-
‘Language is part of your identity’
Language is omnipresent: when you talk, app or meet in Teams. Understanding how we communicate with one another and what communication does to us is essential. In her inaugural lecture, Nivja de Jong will call to redress the balance between the sciences and the humanities.
-
Renaming Ambiguity: Modernist Dream Encounters in Islamic Indonesia
Lecture, LUCIS What's New?! Series
-
Anoma van der Veere
Faculty of Humanities
-
How AI helps map sign languages
Like spoken languages, sign languages evolve organically and do not always have the same origin. This produces different ways of communication and annotation. Manolis Fragkiadakis wrote his PhD thesis on this.