Previous events - Page 13
Welcome to a lecture by Prof. Bj?rn Olav Utvik on the interplay between football, religion and politics in Morocco.
An engaging meeting with this year's Arne N?ss professor, Jason Hickel.
Department seminar. Sebastian Siegloch is a Professor of Economics at the University of Cologne.
The symposium features Jason Hickel, the 2023 Arne N?ss Professor.
On the 12th and 13th of September 2023 Ariane Dupont-Kieffer will give four lectures about the history of econometrics and the specific contributions of Frisch and Haavelmo in the formative period of econometrics as discipline specific methodology. The lectures are open to all interested.
On the 12th and 13th of September 2023 Ariane Dupont-Kieffer will give four lectures about the history of econometrics and the specific contributions of Frisch and Haavelmo in the formative period of econometrics as discipline specific methodology. The lectures are open to all interested.
Welcome to a conversation with Rahul Gandhi, member of the Indian parliament and leader of the opposition.
Department seminar. Danial Ali Akbari is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Economics, University of Oslo. He will present the paper: "Technology Adoption and Human Capital Accumulation."
Staff and students are cordiallly invited to a three-paper workshop on the application of digital tools for the analysis of historical English materials. The organiser is grateful to the Anders Jahre Fond for financial support.
Department seminar. Johannes Spinnewijn is a Professor of Economics at London School of Economics. He will present the paper: "The Chronic Condition Index: Analyzing Health Inequalities Over the Lifecycle" (written with Kaveh Danesh, Jon Kolstad and Will Parket).
Yael Friedman is a PhD fellow at the Centre for Philosophy and the Sciences (CPS), Department of Philosophy, Classics, History of Art and Ideas. Her dissertation explores the concept of medical holism and its relation to pluralism ‘in’ science and ‘with’ science.
How does online crowdfunding change the ways we seek and provide health care? In this seminar, Dr. Nora Kenworthy will discuss how crowdfunding reinforces the many problems of market-based health systems.
Department seminar. Giacomo Brusco is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Economics, University of Tübingen. He will present the paper: "Guess Who's Evading on Dinner: Experimental Evidence on the Incidence of Tax Evasion."
Seminar with Venezuelan economist Manuel Sutherland.
Gender Expansive Philosophy (GEP) invites all philosophy students and staff to a seminar!
In this lecture, Fred Moten (New York University) will discuss the question of observation in the context of violence and mourning.
Lecture by Cheehyung Harrison Kim.
Department seminar. Aurélien Baillon is a Professor of economics of uncertainty at Emlyon business school. He will present the paper: "Follow the money, not the majority: Markets for predicting unverifiable events" (written with Benjamin Tereick and Tong V. Wang).
In this lecture Dr. Lu will discuss the impact and conflicts arising from the development of offshore windfarms on Taiwan's western coastline among local fishing communities.
What novel forms of health interventions and markets do impact bonds generate? And in what ways is the provision of healthcare re-imagined through this financing mechanism?
The fifth event in the seminar series "Perspectives on Thinking" will focus on objective hermeneutics. The guest speaker will be Katarina Busch (Sigmund-Freud-Institute).
Melania Terrazas, senior lecturer at the University of La Rioja, will be giving a lecture on contested boundaries and uncharted entanglements in Evelyn Conlon’s short story collection Moving About the Place (2023)”. In her stories, Conlon creates characters living and setting up relationships in countries in which she has had a longstanding interest: Australia, Japan, Italy, Indonesia, Monaco and South Africa. Terrazas will suggest that Conlon’s stories use transculturality as a method that addresses culture as a dynamic category and debunks ideological dichotomies.
Why We Seek Them Out, and What Their Future Holds. Guest lecture by professor Brenden Rensink.