News
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FASoS scholars Lea Beiermann (Worlds of Wonder) and Susan Schreibman (Letters 1916-1923) are providing opportunities for people to utilise their creative potential to experience research and contribute to it.
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Andrea Ott and Thomas Biermeyer, together with Justine Yansenne, have again managed to secure funding from the EU. This time for a project on ‘Innovating the European Union and transforming Europe’, respectively their ‘European Corporate Finance Law Excellence Course’. The funding was secured from within the Erasmus Plus programme, Jean Monnet Action.
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The Dutch scholarly publications portal NARCIS now presents more than 700,000 open access publications by Dutch academics. Maastricht University counts for 15,228 open access publications.
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Why Mirko stays here
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Jesper is an European Public Affairs alumnus and talks about "The story behind his success".
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“The main goal was learning and having some nerdish fun!”
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From 8 until 11 July 2019, the University of York organised the 2nd European Doctoral Summer School in Professional Development.
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Irena Boskovic wrote her dissertation under the supervision of Professor Harald Merckelbach on “malingerers”, people who deliberately fake medical symptoms to gain some form of benefit. Here, the professor and his former PhD candidate look back on a successful collaboration. Merckelbach: “Irena is very productive, accomplished and an excellent writer.” Boskovic: “What I respect about Harald is that he’ll never play the I’m-the-professor card.”
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GROWINPRO, a new EU-funded project led in part by Prof. Pierre Mohnen and Assistant Prof. Tania Treibich will provide a raft of joined-up policies to set Europe on a more balanced course of development – one fuelled by innovation but sensitive to issues like climate, demographic and labour changes. Six months into the project, we caught up with Pierre and Tania to hear the latest updates.
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Maastricht researchers take part in research to improve assessment of motivation in mental disorders
Research partners from pharma, academia, and SMEs have come together to form the Reward Task Optimisation Consortium (RTOC): an initiative aimed at advancing the development of clinical tools to measure motivational functions in people suffering from mental disorders. Researchers at Maastricht University have joined this consortium.