CLOSED: Job: Postdoctoral Fellow - Malaria: sporozoite-host interactions
Salary range: £31,115 to £39,004 depending on experience.
Closing date for applications: 25th April 2017
Post available for 3 years initially
Salary range: £31,115 to £39,004 depending on experience.
Closing date for applications: 25th April 2017
Post available for 3 years initially
Salary: £31,115 to £39,004 plus excellent benefits
Closing date for applications: 11th April 2017
Three years fixed term
Salary: £31,115 to £39,004 plus excellent benefits.
Closing date for applications: 5th April 2017
Two years fixed term
Position: Project Manager/Field Coordinator
International Center of Excellence for Malaria in India
Organization: New York University
Closing Date: May 15, 2017
Position: Postdoctoral Fellow
Organization: The Sanger Institute Malaria Programme
Salary: £31,115 to £39,004 plus excellent benefits
Two years fixed term
Closing date for applications: 9th February 2017
Organisation: The London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Faculty of Infectious & Tropical Diseases
Salary: £33,006 to £43,028 per annum inclusive
Closing Date: Tuesday 17 January 2017
Interview Date: To be confirmed
Reference: ITD-DCD-21
Department of Medical Microbiology
Temporary
For a period of two years
36 hours per week
Scale 10: max € 57947 gross per year at full employment (incl. vacation bonus and end of year payments)
Published 21-12-2016
Closing date 31-01-2017
Job description
Position: Postdoctoral Fellow
Organization: The Sanger Institute Malaria Programme
Salary Range: £31,115 to £39,004 plus excellent benefits
Two years fixed term
The laboratory of Matt Thomas in the Entomology department at The Pennsylvania State University seeks to fill two postdoctoral research positions to work on empirical and theoretical aspects of the ecology and control of mosquito vectors.
The Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine (LSTM), in collaboration with the Ministry of Public Health and Population (MPHP) of the Republic of Haiti, The Ifakara Health Institute, University of Glasgow and the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, is undertaking a project entitled “Affordable, scalable, low-technology transfluthrin emanators for protecting against Zika transmission in low-income countrie