News
-
On Wednesday 15 March 2023, there will be elections in the Netherlands. We will then vote for the Provincial Council and the District Water Board. Seven of the 12 Dutch provinces border a neighbouring country. Cross-border cooperation and special attention for border regions is therefore extra important. According to Eurostat's definition, the entire province of Limburg qualifies as a border region.
-
A group of Maastricht University's Business Engineering Bachelor's students won three awards at this year's edition of the renowned ENGCOMM, the Engineering and Commerce Case Competition, held by the University of Concordia in Montreal (Canada).
-
The consultation round on the upcoming ITEM Cross-Border Impact Assessment 2023 has been launched! Grab the opportunity to share your experiences with ITEM! Dossier suggestions can be made up to and including 7 March 2023.
-
New research ROA: wide variation in app usage and earnings Uber drivers
-
Last month, Will Bynum successfully defended his PhD at the School of Health Professions Education on shame in learners in the medical education setting.
-
On May 11 and 12, Maastricht will host the NVMO-conference of the association for health professions education of the Netherlands and Flanders. The theme of this year’s conference is Samen leren, Samen werken (Learning together, Working together).
-
On 28 February, METRO researcher Qian Wu successfully defended her PhD thesis 'Tying in Digital Platforms under the Competition Legal Framework in China and the EU: A Comparative Law and Economics Perspective'.
-
SBE Researcher Jakob Raymaekers has been awarded a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Postdoctoral Fellowship grant for his research project. The objective of this grant is to support researchers’ careers and foster excellence in research.
-
We are delighted to announce that Ellen Bastiaens is now officially filling the role of EDLAB director starting 1 February 2023.
-
Do/did you have a part-time job? Then you pay tax without noticing it. Your employer pays you, but at the same time pays tax on your behalf. You can often get some of that money back when you file your income tax return.