Magazine Collection
The Cultural Baggage of Wild Animals
A nature conservation biologist explains how wolves and lynxes are treated differently
Is everything different here?
International participants from the Summer University explain what surprised them about Germany
From Soldering Iron to Molecular Switch
Students of synthetic biology and microsystems engineering are learning together
Agreement for More Open Access
DEAL consortium signs memorandum of understanding with Springer Nature
Doorway and doorman all in one
The protein complex TOM regulates protein access to cell power plants – Chris Meisinger aims to find out which signal pathways can change that selection
A Stage for All
At the World Gymnaestrada, Freiburg sports students experienced the intercultural power of dance
Setting mile markers for environmental protection
Student initiatives bring together their activities in a sustainability office
Buckling as a technical revolution
A planned Freiburg startup has improved micropumps and linked them up with microvalves
Top Performance in Shanghai Ranking
In the latest appraisal, the University of Freiburg is in the top ten nationally, and among the international leaders in its key field of Environment and Sustainability
Graffers and the City
Street art artists depict developments in the field of artificial intelligence (AI)
Young, Loud, Fast
What differentiates ‘Fridays for Future’ from other environmental campaigns is the age of the demonstrators – and their ability to mobilize rapidly
The artificial trap
The botanist and biomechanic Thomas Speck recreates natural principles in a remarkably authentic way
“Generating and sharing knowledge”
Frederik Wenz puts his cards on the digitalization and inclusion of patients and staff at University Medical Center Freiburg
Machine-optimizing machines
The computer scientist Frank Hutter investigates how machine learning can be made easier to use
Changing Narrative Forms
English scholar Monika Fludernik wants to open up new horizons in literary studies with a prestigious Reinhart Koselleck project
Absurd Laws
Albert Einstein once described quanta as "spooky" – researchers at the European Campus want to fathom the rules that govern how this uncharted world works