At the request of the Dutch Ministry of Finance, Professors Ingrid Robeyns and Rutger Claassen wrote an ethical analysis and advice on the compensations of the childcare benefits affair.
Dr Hanneke Tuithof was on the committee Strengthening Knowledge of History of the Former Dutch East Indies, which carried out research on behalf of the State Secretary for Health, Welfare and Sport.
People interested in fitness and dieting are shown harmful videos on TikTok in no time, Utrecht Data School, De Groene Amsterdammer, and RTL Nieuws find.
Researchers Gerda Bruinsma, Ellen Gerrits, and Frank Wijnen (Institute for Language Sciences) found that children did partially catch up upon their delays.
By Marijke de Valck and others, ‘Rethinking Film Festivals in the Pandemic Era and After’ was recently published. 25 international authors contributed.
The book, edited by Professor of Musicology Emile Wennekes and others, presents developments in speech and music technology in the domain of audio signal processing.
Following the death of 22-year-old student Mahsa Amini, thousands of Iranians are taking to the streets every day. They are demonstrating for more freedom and equal rights.
Pooyan Tamimi Arab’s research foundation GAMAAN shows that more than 80 per cent of Iranians do not want an Islamic republic and support protests in the country.
Edited by Sandra Ponzanesi and others, this volume explores how migrants, refugees, and citizens express and share their causes and experiences through art and media.
Edited by Rick Dolphijn and Rosi Braidotti, a series of contributions places the philosophy of Deleuze and Guattari in the context of contemporary fascism.
This week is dedicated to commemorating the Holocaust. An interview with Lorena De Vita, Assistant Professor in the History of International Relations.
The film industry needs to be more sustainable, the Netherlands Film Festival believes. Humanities scholars figured out how and Judith Keilbach shares best practices and bottlenecks.
Assistant Professor Ozan Ozavci writes in The Conversation why so many Turks believe there are ‘secret clauses’ in the birth certificate of their nation (1923).
Op donderdagmiddag 16 februari geven Antal van den Bosch en Dong Nguyen een lezing over de impact van de recente AI-ontwikkelingen op de taalkunde en de digital humanities.
Professor of Media and Digital Society José van Dijck speaks at IMPAKT TV about how digital platforms and social media are influencing our democracy through data.
The KVS Preadviezen, compiled by Rutger Claassen and Dirk Schoenmaker, state, among other things, that companies should help solve societal challenges.
For six months, Jesper Verhoef will research the crucial role the web plays in the lives of LGBTQI+ communities. He will use KB’s unique but largely unexplored web collection.
Medieval scholar Jelmar Hugen saw people using Dutch, French and Latin interchangeably and wondered: why did some poets pepper their Dutch text with Latin quotations?
The new book Wealth & Power by Professor of Political Philosophy and Economic Ethics Rutger Claassen, among others, explores the link between wealth and politics.
Mirko Tobias Schäfer and Iris Muis of the Utrecht Data School were invited by The Greens/EFA to talk about the Fundamental Rights & Algorithms Impact Assessment (FRAIA).
Last October, Beatrice de Graaf delivered the 33rd Wellington Lecture, which provided an insight into how the ‘terror’ of Napoleon was curbed in the years after 1815.
The Algemeen-Nederlands Verbond awards the Visser-Neerlandia Prizes annually to people who dedicate themselves to the Dutch language and cultural community.