New defence agreement secures the financing of the Centre for Military Studies The first partial agreement under the defence agreement for 2024-2033 includes a continuation of the cooperation between the parties to the defence agreement and the University of Copenhagen about the Centre for Militar…
New defence agreement secures the financing of the Centre for Military Studies The first partial agreement under the defence agreement for 2024-2033 includes a continuation of the cooperation between the parties to the defence agreement and the University of Copenhagen about the Centre for Militar…
EU to support psychedelic therapy for patients with progressive incurable disease A new research project is investigating whether the psychedelic drug psilocybin can be used for the psychological treatment of people with incurable illness. Now the EU will support the project with €6.5 million.
Fabio Gigone awarded a Carlsberg Foundation Internationalisation Fellowship Our colleague Fabio Gigone received a Carlsberg Foundation Internationalisation Fellowship. We have interviewed him about his new project. Fabio Gigone You recently successfully defended your PhD at the Centre fo…
Karen Lauterbach Appointed to Editorial Board Director and Associate Professor Karen Lauterbach has been appointed to the advisory editorial board for the Journal of Modern African Studies published by Cambridge University Press. The journal offers a survey of…
Can DNA revelations change your views on race? Does it influence people's views on race when they learn about their own DNA roots? Not much, according to a new research project from the Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen.
CMS Researcher Tobias Liebetrau publishes new article in Journal of Cyber Policy Researcher at CMS, Tobias Liebetrau, has co-authored a newly published article in the Journal of Cyber Policy entitled: “Cybersecurity and the politics of knowledge production: towards a reflexive practice”.
Artificial Intelligence and Privacy: Causes for Concern. Video from the PRIVACY Challenge Seminar with Mateusz Jurewicz. Video from the PRIVACY Challenge Seminar with Mateusz Jurewicz now available.
New PRIVACY book: Privacy at Sea - Practices, Spaces and Communication in Maritime History Privacy at Sea - Practices, Spaces and Communication in Maritime History is edited by PRIVACY Assistant Professor Natacha Klein Käfer and contains contributions by PRIVACY scholars.
Early career researcher researcher's article on referendums honoured Alice el-Wakil wins the Danish Political Science Association's award for best paper by an early career researcher. The article addresses the claim that referendums allow voters to "legislate" but offer no way to hold…
Critique of Denmark's Poor Listening Skills Towards Africa's Climate Goals In an article for Altinget, Associate Professor Stig Jensen together with Rune Larsen, points out the hypocrisy of Denmark’s climate initiatives. Minister for Development Cooperation and Global Climate Policy, Dan…
Young people find cocaine use increasingly common in party settings Cocaine use is becoming normalised in parts of party culture, according to a new study of Roskilde festival attendees.
Atreyee Sen is featured in a recently published ethnographic volume on disappearance CGC researcher, Atreyee Sen, has authored a chapter in a recently published book on disappearance in different social, cultural and political contexts.
CMS professor gets special role in war crimes investigations Kevin Jon Heller, Professor at the Centre for Military Studies in the Department of Political Science, has been appointed Special Adviser on War Crimes to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC).
CMS professor gets special role in war crimes investigations Kevin Jon Heller, Professor at the Centre for Military Studies in the Department of Political Science, has been appointed Special Adviser on War Crimes to the Prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC).
New EU-funded project will explore how AI shapes scientific knowledge Et nyt projekt finansieret af Det Europæiske Forskningsråd vil forstå effekten af kunstig intelligens på skabelsen og udbredelsen af videnskabelig viden.
The Resilience of Africa's Democracies and the Their Military Coups Associate Professor, Stig Jensen, has recently been in the media to discuss the ongoing military coups that many African counties are experiencing. He explains that many citizens in the countries in Africa that have…
Link between green crisis initiatives and social justice to be explored How can initiatives to address climate change, biodiversity loss and social injustice be combined? This is what a new project by Professor Michele Betsill will investigate.
Five social science projects to investigate green transition Five projects in Anthropology, Sociology and Political Science receive a total of DKK 15.8 million from Independent Research Fund Denmark (DFF) from the programme supporting independent green research.
Black Americans from well-educated families continue to face educational barriers While racial disparities in education have narrowed in the US, African American individuals from well-educated backgrounds still find it especially difficult to attain the same high level of education as their parents.
Employment programmes have less effect than assumed A group of experts has analysed Denmark's employment efforts, which cost DKK 11 billion annually. The group assesses that the programme has had significantly less effect on employment than one would expect based on the…
Book Symposium: Pentecostalism and Politics Director and Associate Professor Karen Lauterbach contributes to Contending Modernities’ book symposium (Symposium on Pastoral Power Clerical State Archives | Contending Modernities) on Ebenezer Obadare’s book Pastoral…
Nuno Grancho gave a conference paper at Harvard, MIT and Brown Universities Nuno Grancho presented his research at the Conference of the Historians of Eighteenth-Century Art and Architecture (HECAA) that took place at Harvard, MIT and Brown Universities, USA.
Wokewashing undermines the credibility of CEO sociopolitical communications CEOs are increasingly participating in sociopolitical debates. However, their efforts can be ineffective, or even backfire, if consumers view the statements as unauthentic, according to a new international study.