The Danish National Research Foundation is ready to invest DKK 47 million in a new basic research centre in pandemics at Roskilde University. The centre will be headed by tt备用网址 Lone Simonsen, also known as Corona-Lone.
More students will have the opportunity to get an internship and make projects locally in collaboration with Zealandic municipalities and companies. And in the longer run, there will be a number of study places locally in the region. This is Roskilde University's plan for relocation.
Young people who are committed to the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), and are combating climate change or tackling other global challenges, may have unequal opportunities to participate, depending on where they come from in the world. How do young people experience the discrepancy between expectations of equal, global partnerships and their very different life circumstances? This is what Associate tt备用网址 Mette Fog Olwig from Roskilde University will investigate in a new research project.
The world needs a green transition, but we won't get there if we don't know how to manage and lead the interdisciplinary collaboration that will create the new green solutions. A major new international research project will lead the way.
Is it possible to create new nanomaterials that can form surfaces capable of recognising and degrading harmful bacteria or viruses? Scientists from Roskilde University are about to investigate this in a new research project that has received DKK 2 million from Villum Experiment.
The recently established Centre for Digital Citizenship at Roskilde University will investigate how digital technologies are transforming public engagement.
Data from two million Danes show for the first time in the world that there is a link between traffic noise and the development of dementia. The results may give us completely new possibilities to prevent dementia, says noise expert and adjunct professor at Roskilde University, Mette S?rensen.
PhD student Anne Julie Arnfred will explore how collaboration between science, art and curation can create new ways of working with academic knowledge.