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International Relations: Contemporary Issues and Actors (EUS2005)
Start: Period 3Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
CourseInternational Relations: Contemporary Issues and Actors
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Placing Europe: Cities, Regions, Borders (EUS2006)
Start: Period 3Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
CoursePlacing Europe: Cities, Regions, Borders
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Research Methods: Interviewing (EUS3500)
Start: Period 4Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Skills trainingQualitative Research Skills IIa: Interviewing
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Research Methods: Survey Research (EUS3502)
Start: Period 4Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Skills trainingQuantitative Data Analysis II: Survey Research
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Anxiety and Related Disorders (GGZ2024)
Start: Period 5Fac. Health, Medicine and Life Sciences
Course -
Area studies (EUS2003)
Start: Period 4Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
CourseArea studies
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Argumentation I (SKI2049)
Start: Period 1, Period 4University College Maastricht
Skills training -
Argumentation II (SKI3002)
Start: Period 2University College Maastricht
Skills training -
Back to the Sources (SKI2005)
Start: Period 4University College Maastricht
Skills training -
Biorhythms in Homeostasis (BBS2051)
Start: Period 5Fac. Health, Medicine and Life Sciences
Course -
Brain, Behavior and Movement (BBS1004)
Start: Period 4Fac. Health, Medicine and Life Sciences
Course -
Cell Signaling (BBS2042)
Start: Period 4Fac. Health, Medicine and Life Sciences
CourseOptimal communication between cells is a prerequisite for proper functioning of the human body. The course BBS20042 Cell Signalling is directed to understand underlying mechanisms how cells communicate in homeostasis and how altered cellular communication is involved in diseases. The course contains 4 overall themes: a) cellular communication routes, b) cell-derived molecules as signalling mediators c) cellular responses dependent on external signals and d) pathological alterations in cell signalling and biotechnology techniques to investigate this. The learning activities consist of lectures, PBL tasks, practicals, concept mapping and journal clubs and are all directed to understand underlying signalling mechanisms responsible for homeostatic processes and disease processes. The contents will extend examples that were included in previous BBS courses but now with a specific focus on cell signalling mechanisms. Additionally, students will learn to understand how a dysregulation of cell signalling leads to pathological conditions, including toxicity responses resulting in cancer. Furthermore, students will obtain knowledge on the application of recent biotechnology tools (e.g. CRISPR) to investigate normal and dysregulated cell signalling.
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Civil Society and European Integration (EUS4007)
Start: Period 5Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
CourseCivil Society and European Integration
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Comparative Politics and Government (EUS2002)
Start: Period 4Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
CourseComparative Politics and Government
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Cooperation and Communication (MSF) II (BBS2012)
Start: YearFac. Health, Medicine and Life Sciences
Course
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