Guest lectures and seminars
Upcoming 5 days
Department seminar. Giulia Vattuone is a Labour Economist at the Swedish Institute for Social Research (SOFI) at Stockholm University. She will present the paper "Women in Top Academic Positions: Is There a Trickle-down Effect?" (written with Manuel Bagues, Milan Makany and Natalia Zinovyeva).
Maxim Greenberg is the team leader at the Institut Jacques Monod. He will be presenting his work on "Non-canonical functions of DNA methylation in mammals".
This seminar is a joint contribution to both the NCMBM International Seminar Series and the Sven Furberg Seminar Series, in association with Oslo Chromatin Club.
Associate Professor of Music Theory and Head of Music Research in the Desautels Faculty of Music at the University of Manitoba, Rebecca Simpson-Litke, will speak at RITMO's Seminar Series.
With a proportion of 43 percent of women in its national legislature since 2020, Taiwan has arguably become Asia's leader in women's political representation. Dr. Chang-Ling Huang offers some perspectives on how and why that is.
Welcome to this open lecture with Professor II at STK Jennifer McWeeny.
Mathias Grote (University of Greifswald) will give a talk for the Science Studies Colloquium Series.
The Department of Media and Communication are happy to welcome Professor Ben Light, University of Salford, UK, for a talk on researching the everyday and the challenges of the digital.
Further upcoming events
The Assad-family has ruled over Syria for more than 50 years. In December, it took opposition groups less than two weeks to overthrow the regime.
Department seminar. Lucas Conwell is a Lecturer at the Department of Economics at University College London. He will present the paper "Privatized Provision of Public Transit".
Bernhard Hollick (IAKH, UiO)
In this lecture, Prof. Niki Alsford aims to contribute to a continued effort to reframe the narrative of Taiwan perched on the edge of continent, to instead focus on Taiwan on the edge of ocean.
Paul Edwards (Stanford University) will give a talk for the Science Studies Colloquium Series.