-
Staff
Sara Eldén - Professor
sara.elden@mau.se+46 72 212 15 42Department of Society, Culture and Identity -
Content
Why choose Malmö University
Sweden, Malmö, and Malmö University have a lot to offer. We have gathered some of the reasons why Malmö University is a good choice for you.
-
Staff
Magnus Nilsson - Professor
magnus.nilsson@mau.se+46 40 665 72 29School of Arts and Communication (K3) -
Content
RESEARCH SUBJECTReligious Studies
Within the research field of religious studies, various aspects of religion and belief in history and the present are studied. The focus is on the importance of religious beliefs and practices for people in different societies from both a local and a...
-
Content
RESEARCH SUBJECTMaterials Engineering
At Materials Science, we carry out fundamental research of industrial relevance. Our research is synergistic, encompassing modelling and experiments, and carried out on multiple spatial and temporal scales. We perform our studies at large-scale facilities...
-
Content
Literature Education Network
The Literature Education Network (LitEd) gathers researchers and teachers inside and outside of Sweden. Its purpose is to make visible and to strengthen literature education research and practice in school, higher education, and the society at large.
-
News
Published: 5 December 2023Lack of vision for Swedish schools, an academic reflects on PISA results
The results of the PISA report show a broad decline in knowledge for Swedish students. "I cannot see any planned measures that could change this development," says Anders Jakobsson, a professor at Malmö University.
-
News
Published: 2 November 2023The joys of researching next door to two world-renowned largescale facilities
Two academics have high expectations of two largescale research facilities in the Öresund region. Emelie Nilsson and Andrea Scotti, both researchers and university lecturers at the Department of Biomedical Science, have a shared interest in utilising the...
-
News
Published: 31 October 2023Halloween – not as death obsessed as you might think
Halloween is celebrated in many places, but the holiday has not always been about death. Manon Hedenborg White, associate professor of history of religions, explains how it came to be the trick-or-treating, pumpkin-carving holiday that it is today.
-
Staff
Manana Kock Kobaidze - Senior lecturer
manana.kock.kobaidze@mau.se+46 40 665 75 87Global and regional studies
77 search results for modern