Anna-Lena Rüland
Guest
- Name
- Dr. A.N. Rüland
- Telephone
- +31 71 527 2727
- a.n.ruland@liacs.leidenuniv.nl
- ORCID iD
- 0000-0001-6057-0062
Anna-Lena joined the INSCONS project as a PhD candidate in January 2021. In July 2024 she defended her thesis succesfully. She holds a BA in Politics, Administration and Organization from the University of Potsdam and a MA in International Relations from the Free University of Berlin, Humboldt University of Berlin and the University of Potsdam.
Anna-Lena joined the INSCONS project as a PhD candidate in January 2021. She holds a BA in Politics, Administration and Organization from the University of Potsdam and a MA in International Relations from the Free University of Berlin, Humboldt University of Berlin and the University of Potsdam. During her studies, she spent a year abroad at Sciences Po Paris, France. Anna-Lena also studied at Université de Montréal, Canada, for a semester. Prior to joining INSCONS, she worked as a Program Manager at the Free University of Berlin and gained practical experience at the intersection of policy and science at The World Academy of Sciences, a UNESCO program.
Guest
- Science
- Leiden Inst of Advanced Computer Science
- Rüland A.N. & Rüffin N. (2024), A comparison of British and German parliamentary discourses on science diplomacy over time, Global Policy 15(2): 247-259.
- Rüland A.N. (4 July 2024), Who gets what, when, and how?: An analysis of stakeholder interests and conflicts in and around Big Science (Dissertatie. Leiden Institute of Advanced Computer Science (LIACS), Faculty of Science, Leiden University). Supervisor(s): Jong S. & Koops J.A.
- Rüland A.N. (2024), Sustaining local opposition to Big Science: a case study of the Thirty Meter Telescope controversy, Technology in Society 78: 102597.
- Rüland A.N. (25 November 2024), When does local resistance to Big Science persist and raise wide-spread attention?: Lessons learned from the Thirty Meter Telescope controversy. Europe of Knowledge. [blog entry].
- Rüland A.N. (2023), Big science, big trouble? : Understanding conflict in and around big science projects and networks, Minerva 61: 553-580.
- Rüland A.N., Rüffin N., Cramer K., Ngabonziza P., Saxena M. & Skupien S. (2023), Science diplomacy from the Global South: the case of intergovernmental science organizations, Science and Public Policy 50(4): 782-793.
- Rüland A.-L., Rüffin N., Cramer K., Ngabonziza P., Saxena M. & Skupien S. (29 June 2023), Science diplomacy and the North-South divide: lessons learned from Southern participation in intergovernmental science organizations. Europe of Knowledge: ECPR Standing Group Knowledge Politics and Policies (ECPR). [blog entry].
- Rüland A.-L., Rüffin N., Cramer K., Skupien S., Ngabonziza P. & Saxena M. (6 October 2023), Science diplomacy from the Global South: new insights, venues for investigation, and lessons learned. The Hague Journal of Diplomacy Blog. The Hague: The Hague Journal of Diplomacy (Leiden University). [blog entry].
- Rüland A.N. (2023), The effectiveness of science diplomacy between adversarial states: insights from US–Cuban and US–Iranian science collaborations, The Hague Journal of Diplomacy 18: 509-533.
- Rüland A-L. (2022), Learning from rivals: the role of science diplomats in transferring Iran's health house policy to the US, Globalizations 19(8): 1311-1327.
- Rüffin N. & Rüland A.N. (2022), Between Global Collaboration and National Competition: Unraveling the Many Faces of Arctic Science Diplomacy, Polar Record 58: E20.
- Rüland A.N. (13 July 2022), Learning from rivals: the role of science diplomacy. Europe of Knowledge (ECPR Standing Group Knowledge Politics and Policies). [blog entry].