Tidligere arrangementer - Side 31
Alongside the democratic development and the rise of Taiwanese consciousness over the last three decades, the dominant China-centric discourse has given way to a Taiwan-first mindset. This lecture discusses the making of Taiwan identity.
J?rg Rüpke (Erfurt)
Hannah Bergh-Johnsen (MA linguistics) snakker om forel?pige funn i sin masteroppgave om chattesamtaler mellom potensielle seksuelle overgripere og barn.
Join us for a CIMS seminar with Sardar Aziz, on superpower engagement and relations with Kurdistan.
Nicolas Poirier, Ph.D. fellow at Rosseland Centre for Solar Physics, University of Oslo.
The first Welcome to the Anthropocene lecture will be led by Dr. Hanna Guttorm, senior researcher at the University of Helsinki, who focuses on Indigenous studies and is a member of Helsinki Institute of Sustainability Sciences.
Welcome to a seminar on Lyme disease and forest tick encephalitis (TBE) for doctors and other health personnel with an interest in tick-borne diseases.
Lecturer Dr. Barbara Siller, University College Cork, will give a talk on “Kafka Tales of the Twenty-First Century – Doors, Walls, and Fences in The Gurugu Pledge (2017) by Juan Tomás ?vila Laurel and Lights in the Distance. Exile and Refuge at the Borders of Europe (2018) by Daniel Trilling”.
Felleskollokvium by Dr. James Catmore, Dept. of Physics, UiO
Filippo Battistoni (Pisa) - Discussant: Ed Bispham (Oxford)
EU-tilpasning eller autokrati og etno-nasjonalistisk samfunnsmodell?
Why do we consume as we do, how is consumption changing, and why do we keep consuming more and more, despite the visible damage we are doing to the planet?
Lecturer: Christa Cuchiero (University of Vienna)
QOMBINE seminar talk by Vebj?rn Hallberg Bakkestuen (UiO)
By Ken A. Thompson from Stanford University, USA
Professor Adam Martin, from Leeds Conservatoire, 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.
Jér?me Epsztein from Inmed will present his research on neuronal determinants of spatial cognition as part of the NCMM Tuesday Seminar Series.
Talk by Barbara Siller, lecturer in the Department of German and the Programme Director of the MA Applied Linguistics within the School of Languages, Literatures and Cultures at University College Cork.
Presentation of two ongoing research projects at IMV
Department seminar. Rahul Deb is a Professor at University of Toronto Mississauga. He will present the paper: "Which wage distributions are consistent with statistical discrimination?" (written with Ludovic Renou).
Join us for the book launch of Sunni City: Tripoli from Islamist Utopia to the Lebanese Revolution. Tine Gade (NUPI) discusses her study of the political history of Tripoli, and how it reflects upon wider national and regional dynamics of Lebanon and the Middle East, in conversation with Brynjar Lia.
Constructing fast solution schemes often involves deciding which errors are acceptable and which approximations can be made for the sake of computational efficiency. Herein, we consider a mixed formulation of Darcy flow in porous media and take the perspective that the physical law of mass conservation is significantly more important than the constitutive relationship, i.e. Darcy's law. From this point of view, we propose an inexact solution technique that nevertheless guarantees local mass conservation. The method is based on first solving the mass balance equation and then computing a solenoidal correction using the curl of a potential field. We extend the method to flows in fractured porous media and present numerical experiments that indicate the efficiency of the scheme.