Utrecht University (UU) is the first Dutch university to have its biodiversity footprint mapped by PRé Sustainability. This enables the university to investigate the impact of its activities on nature ...
As of 1 November 2025, Simona Negro will be appointed professor of Circular Societies, with a focus on the transition from a linear to a circular society.
The central challenge addressed by this chair is how we can achieve sustainable land use and management in the face of intensifying and often competing demands.
Arnout Geeraert finds that the institutional framework of FIA lacks the safeguards needed to prevent the concentration of power and ensure effective policies.
From 1 November 2025, Jarno Hoekman will be appointed Professor of Science Studies for Sustainability. In this new role, Hoekman will advance education and research on the governance and organisation ...
In this thesis, we have investigated a specific type of T cell, the γδT cell, and its potential as an immunotherapy against cancer. We aimed to improve current γδT cell-based therapies and demonstrate ...
In Global Environmental Change, an international team of researchers led by Frances Dunn from Utrecht University introduces a new conceptual model for climate adaptation.
Beyond Trust: A Causal Approach to Explainable AI in Law Enforcement prof. dr. mr. H. Prakken ...
Literary scholar and cultural historian Dirk van Miert has been appointed Professor by Special Appointment in the History of Knowledge from a Digital Perspective at Utrecht University.
As of 15 October 2025, Kees van den Bos has been appointed professor at the new chair ‘Organisational Development and Leadership for Societal Transitions’.
Lonneke Roelofs studied a phenomenon that we do not know here on Earth and that had never been observed by anyone before.
Cancer remains a leading cause of childhood death in the Netherlands and other high-income countries, especially solid tumors. Despite intensive multi-modal therapies, survival rates remain low, ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results