Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 24471 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24241) News (1803) People (1402) Editions (366) Chair (360) (-) Page (230) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Page Event Jessica Balguy Reparations, compensations, indemnities: the idea of justice in the aftermath of the abolition of 1848, based on the case of Martinique Symposium 13 Jun 2025 16:00 to 16:30 Event Sibylle Fourcaud Moral debt and social rights: distinguishing political compensation under the Restoration Symposium 13 Jun 2025 15:30 to 16:00 Event Alexia M. Yates Indemnitaires and Obligataires: The Means and Meaning of Haïti's Debt in Nineteeth-century France Symposium 13 Jun 2025 14:30 to 15:00 Event Mathilde Ackermann Postcolonial racial ambiguities: the occultation of the notion of "race" in the Haitian compensation process of 1825 Symposium 13 Jun 2025 14:00 to 14:30 Event Antoine Lilti Discussion Symposium 13 Jun 2025 11:30 to 12:30 Event Pierre Buteau The State and the peasantry in relation to the indemnity debt Symposium 13 Jun 2025 11:00 to 11:30 Event Arielle Alterwaite The auction of sovereignty: The Haitian indemnity of 1825 in a global financial context Symposium 13 Jun 2025 10:00 to 10:30 Event Michael Kwass An alternative history of the ordinance of 17 April 1825: Haitian opposition to the half-right Symposium 13 Jun 2025 09:30 to 10:00 Series How to read (continued) William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie (Et in Arcadia ego) (detail), second version, c. 1638, Musée du Louvre Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what … 14 Jan 2025 → 18 Mar 2025 Series How to read (continued) William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie (Et in Arcadia ego) (detail), second version, circa 1638, Musée du Louvre Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what … 14 Jan 2025 → 18 Mar 2025 Event Stephen Quake Understanding the Mysteries of the Cell: How Do Many Cell Types Arise From One Genome? Guest lecturer Abstract Although the genome is often called the blueprint of an organism, it is perhaps more accurate to describe it as a parts list composed of the various genes that may or may not be used in the different cell types of a multicellular organism. … 12 May 2025 17:00 to 18:00 Event Didier Fassin Write to Lecture 20 May 2025 15:15 to 16:15 Event Panagiota Sarischouli Graeco-Egyptian voces magicae: Historicizing a Cross-Cultural Phenomenon Guest lecturer Panagiota Sarischouli is invited by Prof. Jean-Luc Fournet, Chair of Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology . Abstract Although the phenomenon of voces magicae is most often associated with Roman and Late Antique Egypt, the use of … 4 Jun 2025 14:00 to 15:00 Event Antoine Lilti Discussion Symposium 12 Jun 2025 11:30 to 12:30 Event Antoine Lilti, Marlene Daut, Délide Joseph & Chelsea B. Stieber Round table : Haitian independence : an intellectual history Symposium Round table moderated by Antoine Lilti, Collège de France, with the participation of Marlene Daut, Yale University, Délide Joseph, Université de la Guyane, and Chelsea B. Stieber, Tulane … 12 Jun 2025 14:00 to 16:30 Event Emmanuel Sander What makes a good mathematical problem ? :(Re)reconciling intuition and mathematical sense Special events Go to Emmanuel Sander Emmanuel Sander is Professor in the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences at the University of Geneva. A member of the Conseil Scientifique de l'Education Nationale, his research focuses on the analysis of mental … 18 Jun 2025 17:30 to 19:00 Event Jean-Alix René Food versus food : the foundations of the State in Haiti Symposium 12 Jun 2025 10:30 to 11:00 Event Manuel Covo The Haitian Revolution: histories and historiographies Symposium 12 Jun 2025 10:00 to 10:30 Series upper Mesopotamia in the 18th century : portrait gallery Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Lecture Mari's palace being excavated (1937). Aerial view of the French Air Force in the Levant. Mission archéologique de Mari n° 1683b, 1937. As part of the PCEHM program (" Power and written culture in Upper Mesopotamia in the eighteenth century BC "), funded … 13 Jan 2025 → 07 Apr 2025 Event Dominique Rogers Saint-Domingue at the dawn of the Revolution Symposium 12 Jun 2025 09:30 to 10:00 Event Marc Bocquet Artificial intelligence for geophysical data assimilation Special events Abstract Data assimilation is the set of key mathematical methods used to optimally combine observations and numerical model outputs. Data assimilation (DA) is critical to adjust the initial condition of meteorological forecasts, to estimate model … 5 May 2025 16:20 to 17:20 Event Claire Monteleoni Confronting climate change with generative and self-supervised machine learning Special events Abstract The stunning recent advances in AI content generation rely on cutting-edge, generative deep learning algorithms and architectures trained on massive amounts of text, image, and video data. With different training data, these algorithms and … 5 May 2025 15:00 to 16:00 Event Remi Lam Learning global weather forecasting from data Special events Abstract This presentation will cover some of the recent advances in weather forecasting, learning directly from data using machine learning techniques. It will discuss some of the limitations and pitfalls of training ML models for scientific … 5 May 2025 14:00 to 15:00 Event Laure Zanna Reshaping climate modelling with AI Special events Abstract While AI has been disrupting conventional weather forecasting, we are only beginning to witness the impact of AI on long-term climate simulations. The fidelity and reliability of climate models has been limited by computing capabilities. These … 5 May 2025 11:30 to 12:30 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 56 Page 57 Page 58 Page 59 Page 60 Page 61 Page 62 Page 63 Page 64 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Event Jessica Balguy Reparations, compensations, indemnities: the idea of justice in the aftermath of the abolition of 1848, based on the case of Martinique Symposium 13 Jun 2025 16:00 to 16:30
Event Sibylle Fourcaud Moral debt and social rights: distinguishing political compensation under the Restoration Symposium 13 Jun 2025 15:30 to 16:00
Event Alexia M. Yates Indemnitaires and Obligataires: The Means and Meaning of Haïti's Debt in Nineteeth-century France Symposium 13 Jun 2025 14:30 to 15:00
Event Mathilde Ackermann Postcolonial racial ambiguities: the occultation of the notion of "race" in the Haitian compensation process of 1825 Symposium 13 Jun 2025 14:00 to 14:30
Event Pierre Buteau The State and the peasantry in relation to the indemnity debt Symposium 13 Jun 2025 11:00 to 11:30
Event Arielle Alterwaite The auction of sovereignty: The Haitian indemnity of 1825 in a global financial context Symposium 13 Jun 2025 10:00 to 10:30
Event Michael Kwass An alternative history of the ordinance of 17 April 1825: Haitian opposition to the half-right Symposium 13 Jun 2025 09:30 to 10:00
Series How to read (continued) William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie (Et in Arcadia ego) (detail), second version, c. 1638, Musée du Louvre Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what … 14 Jan 2025 → 18 Mar 2025
Series How to read (continued) William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture Nicolas Poussin, Les Bergers d'Arcadie (Et in Arcadia ego) (detail), second version, circa 1638, Musée du Louvre Last year's lecture focused on building mental libraries, finding lost works and editing texts. But once the texts and corpora are there, what … 14 Jan 2025 → 18 Mar 2025
Event Stephen Quake Understanding the Mysteries of the Cell: How Do Many Cell Types Arise From One Genome? Guest lecturer Abstract Although the genome is often called the blueprint of an organism, it is perhaps more accurate to describe it as a parts list composed of the various genes that may or may not be used in the different cell types of a multicellular organism. … 12 May 2025 17:00 to 18:00
Event Panagiota Sarischouli Graeco-Egyptian voces magicae: Historicizing a Cross-Cultural Phenomenon Guest lecturer Panagiota Sarischouli is invited by Prof. Jean-Luc Fournet, Chair of Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology . Abstract Although the phenomenon of voces magicae is most often associated with Roman and Late Antique Egypt, the use of … 4 Jun 2025 14:00 to 15:00
Event Antoine Lilti, Marlene Daut, Délide Joseph & Chelsea B. Stieber Round table : Haitian independence : an intellectual history Symposium Round table moderated by Antoine Lilti, Collège de France, with the participation of Marlene Daut, Yale University, Délide Joseph, Université de la Guyane, and Chelsea B. Stieber, Tulane … 12 Jun 2025 14:00 to 16:30
Event Emmanuel Sander What makes a good mathematical problem ? :(Re)reconciling intuition and mathematical sense Special events Go to Emmanuel Sander Emmanuel Sander is Professor in the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences at the University of Geneva. A member of the Conseil Scientifique de l'Education Nationale, his research focuses on the analysis of mental … 18 Jun 2025 17:30 to 19:00
Event Jean-Alix René Food versus food : the foundations of the State in Haiti Symposium 12 Jun 2025 10:30 to 11:00
Event Manuel Covo The Haitian Revolution: histories and historiographies Symposium 12 Jun 2025 10:00 to 10:30
Series upper Mesopotamia in the 18th century : portrait gallery Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Lecture Mari's palace being excavated (1937). Aerial view of the French Air Force in the Levant. Mission archéologique de Mari n° 1683b, 1937. As part of the PCEHM program (" Power and written culture in Upper Mesopotamia in the eighteenth century BC "), funded … 13 Jan 2025 → 07 Apr 2025
Event Dominique Rogers Saint-Domingue at the dawn of the Revolution Symposium 12 Jun 2025 09:30 to 10:00
Event Marc Bocquet Artificial intelligence for geophysical data assimilation Special events Abstract Data assimilation is the set of key mathematical methods used to optimally combine observations and numerical model outputs. Data assimilation (DA) is critical to adjust the initial condition of meteorological forecasts, to estimate model … 5 May 2025 16:20 to 17:20
Event Claire Monteleoni Confronting climate change with generative and self-supervised machine learning Special events Abstract The stunning recent advances in AI content generation rely on cutting-edge, generative deep learning algorithms and architectures trained on massive amounts of text, image, and video data. With different training data, these algorithms and … 5 May 2025 15:00 to 16:00
Event Remi Lam Learning global weather forecasting from data Special events Abstract This presentation will cover some of the recent advances in weather forecasting, learning directly from data using machine learning techniques. It will discuss some of the limitations and pitfalls of training ML models for scientific … 5 May 2025 14:00 to 15:00
Event Laure Zanna Reshaping climate modelling with AI Special events Abstract While AI has been disrupting conventional weather forecasting, we are only beginning to witness the impact of AI on long-term climate simulations. The fidelity and reliability of climate models has been limited by computing capabilities. These … 5 May 2025 11:30 to 12:30