Leiden University Scholary Publications
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    131438 research outputs found

    'Personalised pricing' bij consumentencontracten: tegen welke prijs?

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    Coherent privaatrech

    Review of Galmarini, M.C. (2024) Ambassadors of social progress: a history of international blind activism in the cold war

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    Cities, Migration and Global Interdependence 1350-200

    Review of Tazelaar, C.; Petrarca, F. (2025) Brieven van een bejaard man

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    Medieval and Early Modern Studie

    Anchoring Innovations. Traditie als fundament voor innovatie

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    NWO024.003.012Classics and Classical Civilizatio

    Automating governance in China?: Data-driven systems in the scoring society

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    This book considers the interplay between the affordances of technologies, the experiences and processes of technological systems, and the process of learning and adaptation by state actors as part of governance reform in China. It offers detailed studies of specific projects and applications that are automated or quasi-automated in organising and governing social, economic, and cultural lives in the world’s largest techno-authoritarian regime. Written by scholars from six countries across four continents, case studies illustrate new modes of digital governance employed by the Chinese government, as it interacts and collaborates with technology companies, ordinary citizens, and other key stakeholders. They offer new insights on the deployment of automated decision-making in authoritarian governance, and on its application and implementation in real-life scenarios. In a broader sense, the book contributes to global debates about the integration of decision-making technologies in governmental practices.'Automating Governance in China?' offers new insights on the deployment of automated decision-making in authoritarian governance and on its application and implementation in real-life scenarios

    Emilie Haspels en de bovenmenselijke wereld van Anatolië

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    Middle Eastern Studie

    Cruzando la frontera entre naturalezas en el mundo político de Flandes en el siglo XVI

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    Europe 1000-1800: Collective Identities and Transnational Network

    Anno Domini: Nederlandse bouwinscripties van de 10de eeuw tot circa 1600

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    This book deals with building inscriptions in the Netherlands from the 10th century until 1600, i.e. inscriptions that tell us something about the date of a building (or rebuilding), the maker and the patron. After an introduction that discusses the status quaestionis and the reliability of the inscriptions, which have sometimes been renewed, replaced or faked, the book deals with the concept of time and the significance of the inscriptions over time. The oldest inscriptions date between the 10th century and 1500 and of these there are few. Even so, these all merit a lengthy discussion. In the 16th century the number of building inscriptions explodes. The book first discusses the variant ways in which the year could be given (Roman letters, arabic numerals, a combination of the previous two types, as a rhyme, as a riddle, and so on); the patrons, composers and 'artists' and the location of the inscription on and in church buildings. The next chapters deal with inscriptions of the highest authroties in the land and the nobility, inscriptions and cities and institutions, and inscriptions of citizens and countryfolk. The final chapters deal inscriptions and memory, and the addressees of building inscriptions.     Medieval and Early Modern Studie

    La vida y fama de don Cristóbal en Flandes

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    Europe 1000-1800: Collective Identities and Transnational Network

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