
Playfully exploring German-Danish differences
As part of a tandem collaboration, students from Copenhagen, Frankfurt and Göttingen compiled cultural and linguistic knowledge in a game

As part of a tandem collaboration, students from Copenhagen, Frankfurt and Göttingen compiled cultural and linguistic knowledge in a game

How have water resources evolved during the last 120 years? What will happen if the temperature rises another two degrees

Landscape architect Robert Anton has been responsible for the flora and fauna on Goethe University’s grounds for the past eleven

This year’s Paul Ehrlich and Ludwig Darmstaedter Prizes will be awarded at Paulskirche in Frankfurt today Physician and immunologist Dennis

After three years of intensive collaboration, leading European experts in adult acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) have published therapy recommendations for

When the search for answers turns into friendship How likely is it that the paths of two Humboldt Fellows from

Researchers from Goethe University Frankfurt and the Senckenberg Biodiversity and Climate Research Centre have modeled the spatial distributional patterns of

Incidences of eating disorders such as bulimia and anorexia are becoming more common, especially among young people. In addition to

Bats live in a world of sounds. They use vocalizations both to communicate with their conspecifics and for navigation. For

Largely unnoticed by the international community, in the past three years different ethnic groups in Myanmar have been fighting together

If gravitational condensate stars (or gravastars) actually existed, they would look similar to black holes to a distant observer. Two

Why is antisemitism a global phenomenon, why does it manifest itself so vehemently in different social and political contexts, and

German Federal President Frank-Walter Steinmeier appointed Klement Tockner, director general of the Senckenberg – Leibniz Institution for Biodiversity and Earth

How bacteria cope with environmental stress by Andreas Lorenz-Meyer Biochemist and microbiologist Inga Hänelt is investigating how bacteria transport potassium,

Mathematics from Ancient Egypt to the coronavirus pandemic by Annette Imhausen We encounter mathematics every day and everywhere. Numbers, units

How different proteins are produced from the same template by Larissa Tetsch The human genome contains around 20,000 genes that

High tech and artificial intelligence shed light on the cellular nanocosmos by Andreas Lorenz-Meyer To advance biomedical research, chemist Mike

Order and disorder in the University Library by Jonas Krumbein With over eleven million printed and digital media, the University

Architectural metaphors in the language of democracies often have little in common with reality by Carsten Ruhl Why is there

Watching evolution happen – with the help of seed banks by Andreas Lorenz-Meyer Evolutionary ecologist Niek Scheepens investigates how plants

The RISS project examines how social change affects established structures in education by Katja Irle Globalization, migration, new gender relations,

How much intervention can order tolerate, how much freedom does order need? by Stefan Terliesner The war in Ukraine has

If populism threatens order, perhaps the stubbornness of reason can help by Olaf Kaltenborn Orders govern our lives and how

Political order under conditions of armed conflict by Hanna Pfeifer Civil war and chaos – these two terms seem closely

Are we allowed to break the law for higher purposes? A debate on civil disobedience as a form of protest

Retrospectively, it is often difficult to pinpoint exactly when order forms again after an uprising by Andreas Fahrmeir Sooner or

75 years ago, the Allies issued the mandate to draw up a West German constitution – in the I. G.

The urgent need for conservatives in Europe’s party systems by Thomas Biebricher Les Républicains in France, the Tories in the
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