Zoekresultaten
On 8 May 2024, the Globalisation & Law Network hosted a seminar featuring Elies van Sliedregt, Professor of Criminal Law and Procedure at Tilburg University.
This online workshop is conducted within the framework of the international research project "Facilitating mutual recognition: Analytics and Capacity building Information Legal eXplainable tool to strengthen cooperation in the criminal matter - FACILEX) of the Justice Program of the European Union (JUST-2022-JCOO).
Het is voor het eerst dat het Internationaal Gerechtshof een student van de Universiteit Maastricht selecteert.
It is the first time the International Court of Justice selected a student from Maastricht University.
On 3 April 2024, the Globalisation & Law Network was pleased to welcome Dr. Laura Mai, Postdoctoral researcher at the Constitutionalising in the Anthropocene project, as a speaker in the context of its seminar series.
The UM team came second in the Grand Final of the 12th edition of the Helga Pedersen Moot Court Competition, which took place at the European Court of Human Rights.
The new episode of the podcast ‘Conversations: Globalization and Law’ features Cecilia Malmström, former EU Commissioner for Trade and Home Affairs.
How can science communication become a fully-fledged part of academic work?Using recognisable situations, the actors in this interactive theatre performance challenge you to engage with each other about recognising and rewarding science communication at Maastricht University.
Atomen en de kleinere elementaire deeltjes gedragen zich op vreemde, soms onvoorspelbare manieren. Het klinkt vreemd, maar juist die onvoorspelbaarheid geeft een kwantumcomputer zijn kracht. Exacte berekeningen maken, met ongekende mogelijkheden en op een manier die natuurkundigen nog steeds niet volledig begrijpen: welkom in de wereld van de kwantumcomputer.
Atoms and smaller elementary particles behave in unusual, sometimes unpredictable ways. It sounds strange, but it is this unpredictability that gives a quantum computer its power. Executing precise calculations with previously unheard-of possibilities in a way that physicists still do not completely comprehend: welcome to the world of the quantum computer.