848 search results for “rights of indigenous people” in the Staff website
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    scientist addresses UN: 'People should not work for the economic system, the economic system should work for the people'
        
    
Environmental scientist Rutger Hoekstra addressed the General Assembly of the United Nations on 12 April. And that’s quite a big thing to do. How do you get there as a scientist? And, more importantly, what was his message? In eight questions, Rutger explains what he does and why.
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    ‘A country’s immigration narrative really influences the people arriving there’
        
    
Immigration and naturalisation policies are an important theme in the upcoming Dutch elections. The Netherlands should be mindful of its immigration narrative, says PhD candidate Hannah Bliersbach, as this greatly influences the relationship between ‘new’ citizens and their new home country.
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    Bianca Boyer on why people with ADHD often experience overstimulation
        
    
What happens in the mind of someone with ADHD? GZ psychologist Bianca Boyer discusses this in a two-part episode of the Dutch 'Podcast Psycholoog'. She likes to look beyond the symptoms described in the DSM-5. 'Those are just the tip of the iceberg.'
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    ‘If you know how the system works, you can stand up for your rights’
        
    
Legal protection. What do those involved in youth care and child protection understand by this concept? And what needs to change to improve legal protection? This question was explored by researchers from Leiden University’s Department of Child Law. Their research fits with the government’s ambition…
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    ‘It’s important that people are happy in their work’
        
    
As Director of Education, Marcellus Ubbink learned to work together with many different people. For him, the social aspects are one of the key areas in his new role as Scientific Director of the Leiden Institute of Chemistry. Who is this new manager and what can we expect from him?
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    ‘Poorer people often bear the brunt of sustainability initiatives’
        
    
The effects of sustainability projects on poorer, marginalised people should be considered at a much earlier stage. This is the opinion of Marja Spierenburg, Professor of Anthropology of Sustainable Development and Livelihood, who will give her inaugural lecture on 25 February.
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    Compelling unemployed people to widen their job search often backfires
        
    
Unemployed people often need not only a financial safety net but also a stimulus to look for work. PhD candidate Heike Vethaak researched the effects of incentives used by benefit agencies, such as compelling people to widen their job search.
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    ‘Build resilience in traumatised children and young people’
        
    
Many children experience trauma and if they are unable to deal with it properly, it can have a huge personal and societal effect. Building resilience in vulnerable children and young people should therefore have the highest priority. This is the message of Anne-Laura van Harmelen, Professor of Brain,…
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    ‘I want to connect young people and the European Parliament’
        
    
Olivier Morskate studied Public Administration at Leiden University and did an internship at the European Parliament's Liaison Office.
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    Step 2: Video formats
    
    
In this step, you will find examples and an explanation of each video format, but remember: video making is a creative process, so don’t let formats limit your imagination. Build on them to find and create your own style that fits your message.
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    AI for HR
    
    
Course, Training session
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    Alex Geert Castermans in Het Parool on the right to swim topless
        
    
In Berlin, regulations have recently been amended to allow everyone to swim topless. In swimming pools in Amsterdam, women are still required to wear a top piece. Dutch newspaper Het Parool investigates whether Amsterdam swimmers also have the right to dive into the pool without wearing a top.
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    New interactive book helps motivate young people and tackle bullying
        
    
How do you deal with bullying? How can you motivate young people? At the NeurolabNL symposium a multidisciplinary research team launched an interactive book for teachers and youth workers. This digital book offers the latest insights and plenty of useful tips and advice. Children’s Ombudsman Margrite…
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    The impact of climate change on groups of people
        
    
The socio-economic effects of climate change often do not receive enough attention. At the EuroScience Open Forum (ESOF) a group of researchers will provide more insight. How does climate change affect whether people work together or conversely end up as opponents? And what can we learn from societies…
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    Thomas Ansell: 'Our biggest goal is to bring people together'
        
    
For this interview, we spoke with Thomas Ansell: Head of Communications at The Hague Humanity Hub. The organisation facilitates and supports innovations geared towards peace and justice. They provide new connections, collaboration networks, and exchange of information. What kind of organisations is…
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    and beyond: Melanie Fink on the consequences of automation for the right to good governance
        
    
From 23 to 24 February 2023, the Conference ‘The Future of the European Security Architecture: The CJEU’s decision on Passenger Name Records and beyond’ took place at the KNAW in Amsterdam.
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    Tsolin NalbantianFaculty of Humanities
t.nalbantian@hum.leidenuniv.nl | +31 71 527 2985
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    Frontiers of Children's Rights Summer School
    
    
Course
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    Sluiter: ‘Accessibility, diversity and inclusion are a matter of doing the right thing’
        
    
For two years, Ineke Sluiter was president of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW). Now, she is returning to the university full time. ‘I always carry themes like accessibility, diversity and inclusion with me.’
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    Interview Ilya Kokorin – ‘Hup, Holland Hup, wasn’t the right answer’
        
    
Doing a PhD can be challenging. Moving to a foreign country can be challenging too. PhD candidate Ilya Kokorin, who was born in a small town in Siberia, faced both, while at the same time having to overcome a number of additional challenges and build a future post-PhD.
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    Teaching students to work together: 'This course came at exactly the right time'
        
    
Collaboration is becoming increasingly important in university education, but how do you get students to actually work together? On a special training day, lecturers from the Faculty of Humanities pondered these and other questions. What did they learn and what do they take with them into their teac…
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    Why people confess to crimes they didn’t commit
        
    
When under duress innocent suspects can make a false confession. Why is this? Legal psychologist Linda Geven will give a talk about this at the Leiden Institute for Brain and Cognition’s Brain & Law event. At this symposium (in Dutch) on 16 September you can attend talks on fascinating brain research…
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    Rebecca Schaefer: 'Music and science bring people together'
        
    
Rebecca Schaefer received the new science communication grant for the SNAAR Festival in December 2020. With the festival, Schaefer wants to make music and science accessible to a wide audience. How exactly? That's what she tells in this issue of Humans of Psychology.
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    Professor Pieter ter Keurs: 'People collect to function'
        
    
Professor Pieter ter Keurs has spent his entire career studying collecting. Now, he is retiring. ‘I hope the focus on collections will carry on.’
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    Emma van der Vos in Trouw on domestic workers’ right to unemployment benefit
        
    
Due to an exception in the law, domestic workers employed by private persons cannot automatially benefit from social security schemes. Home help Carol Kollmann did not agree with this and took her case to court.
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    10 years of OPIC - Pathways of Access to Justice for Children
    
    
Conference
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    at Ukraine Symposium: 'We Europeans have only one chance to get this right'
        
    
Three years on, and interest in Ukraine certainly hasn't waned. The auditorium at the Wijnhaven location was fully booked on Monday. Hundreds of people, including top military brass, listened to Defence Minister Brekelmans' speech. He pointed out to them: 'Here in the Netherlands, we're now living in…
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    The Western Part of the East Indies: Colonial Worldmaking and Global Knowledges at the Early Modern Cape Colony
    
    
Lecture, Global Histories of Knowledge Seminar
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    International students speaking: 'Dutch directness, helpful people and roze koeken'
        
    
The new academic year is on its way and for most students it takes some getting used to being present at the KOG every day. What about international students? We spoke with three internationals who have been studying at Leiden Law School since this academic year.
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    ‘You feel connected to the people of a bygone era’
        
    
Documenting and preserving rock art in the Pakistani Himalayas; this was the aim of the ‘Karakorum Rescue Project’ to which students at the Honours College Archaeology contributed. A Leiden exhibition visualises the project: ‘There is something magical about it.’
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    Mohit KhubchandaniFaculty of Law
m.khubchandani@law.leidenuniv.nl | 33 765644484
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    Paul CliteurFaculty of Law
p.b.cliteur@law.leidenuniv.nl | 071 5272727
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    Developing your own self-image and choosing the right study programme
        
    
How you think about yourself is important for the choices you make. Adolescents are faced with choosing a study programme that will determine their future, while their self-image is still under development. Tough choice? Research by psychologist Laura van der Aar has shown that taking a training course…
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    We’re surrounded by noise: ‘Silence should be a human right’
        
    
Learn how silence can benefit your well-being during Work Stress Week from 11 to 15 November. It’s no surprise that we sometimes need a bit of peace and quiet, says Professor of Auditory Culture Marcel Cobussen. ‘Our brain is exposed day and night to auditory stimuli.’
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    Chief Information Security Officer: ‘Don’t delete phishing emails right away’
        
    
It’s Cybersecurity Awareness Month, and we’re spotlighting the importance of digital safety in the workplace. Our Chief Information Security Officer, Sylvia Bunte-Thelen, shares how staff can help keep our university a safe place to work and study. ‘We need to work together to protect our knowledge.…
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    ‘Legal AI is a bit of a Wild West right now’
        
    
A growing number of AI tools are being developed for the legal sector, to help professionals search lengthy texts or check court rulings. Leiden SAILS researcher Masha Medvedeva, an expert on the technical development of these systems, warns: ‘Users should know what’s under the hood.’
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    World Heritage Status for Letters from Indonesian Women's Rights Advocate Kartini
        
    
UNESCO has recognized a large collection of handwritten letters and the archive of Raden Ajeng Kartini (1879-1904) as documentary world heritage. Kartini opposed gender inequality in feudal Javanese society, including forced marriages, polygamy and lack of education for women.
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    Extinction, Extraction, Emergence: Plantation Necrobiopolitics on the West Papuan Oil Palm Frontier
    
    
Lecture
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    Burning brain questions of young people bundled in new research agenda
        
    
During ExpeditionNEXT in Middelburg, NeurolabNL youth, together with researchers from Leiden University and Erasmus University, handed over a unique research agenda to NWO Chairman Marcel Levi. In it, young people share what they would most like to learn about themselves and the brain.
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    How can people with autism and social anxiety understand others’ emotions better?
        
    
A smile, tears in your eyes or a blush on your cheeks: we understand one another better by mirroring one another’s emotions. In her PhD dissertation, Julia Folz concludes that people with autism or social anxiety can be helped by interventions focused on the body.
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    Endowed Professor Tineke Abma: ‘Help older people feel like they belong’
        
    
Older people are often approached from the perspective of their limitations when there is often much they still can and want to do. According to Professor Tineke Abma, art is a good way to continue to participate.
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    Getting people on board with the energy transition: ‘Times of crisis can help’
        
    
The gas prices now exceed 300 euros per megawatt hour – a record. The transition from fossil (natural gas, coal, oil) to renewable energy is needed and soon. But how do you get a society (and its citizens) to switch to sustainable energy?
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    Between Power and Public Opinion: State Reform in Nepal
        
    
On 24 April 2025, political scientist Pawan Kumar Sen will defend his PhD dissertation, "Transforming Nepal’s Political System: Party Positions and Public Opinion (2004-2012)," at Leiden University. His research examines how Nepal’s major political parties navigated key state restructuring reforms—republicanism,…
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    ERC Starting Grants for seven Leiden researchers
        
    
Seven researchers from Leiden University have been awarded an ERC Starting Grant. This will enable them to start their own project, build their research team and put their best ideas into action.
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    The Right to the Highest Attainable Standard of Health of LGBTQIA+ child asylum-seekers
    
    
Lecture, LIMS seminar
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    Mensenrechten overal anders geïnterpreteerd. Hoe kan dat?
        
    
Hoe kan het dat universele mensenrechten wereldwijd niet hetzelfde in de praktijk worden gebracht?
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    Urban criminologist to research how safe the people of Leiden feel
        
    
Since the beginning of September, urban criminologist Marianne Franken has been the linchpin of a special partnership between Leiden University, the municipality of Leiden and the police. As a PhD candidate she will spend four years conducting research into how safe the people of Leiden feel.
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    Eric van Hoof on online privacy, knights’ shields and looking left, right and left again
        
    
With Sunday 28 January the annual European Data Protection Day, we are drawing attention to data protection and the right to privacy. Because it’s okay to stop and think before sharing our data or that of others, says privacy officer Eric van Hoof. ‘If you cross the road, you don’t do so without looking…
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    Frontiers of Children's Rights: A Summer School for Professionals
    
    
Study information
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    Engaging Humanities - Exploring Impact: 'We'll work together to find the right place for your story'
        
    
Social impact is becoming increasingly important for researchers. On Thursday, Nov. 17, the Faculty of Humanities is organizing Engaging Humanities - Exploring Impact: a day all about impact.