Behavioural Sciences, Social Sciences and Law
Mariëlle Wijermars
Assistant Professor in Cyber-Security and Politics, Maastricht University, Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences
Mariëlle Wijermars examines information governance in authoritarian states such as Russia, focusing specifically on digital platforms. Her expertise spans the visible and invisible mechanisms affecting such information flows. Wijermars' research is innovative in approaching digital platforms as political actors. She does this by analysing platform companies' user policies and algorithms and the role they play in the political discourse of non-democratic states. This basic premise allows her to explore the array of mechanisms through which the circulation of information can be influenced.
Lianne Cremers
Assistant Professor, Visual Medical Anthropology, VU University Amsterdam, Faculty of Social Sciences, Department of Organization Sciences & University of Amsterdam, Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences, Department of Anthropology
Lianne Cremers studies how protracted crises interact with and impact human wellbeing. Her research combines anthropology, disaster management and organisation studies and is notable for focusing on the experience of vulnerable groups. For example, she took a fresh look at patient adherence to a medication programme in Khayelitsha, South Africa, highlighting that patients' failure to adhere to drug treatment is often rooted in complex personal considerations. In other studies, Cremers has promoted public engagement in policymaking, for example in the impact of COVID-19 on young people, and integrated creative communication methods, including film and art exhibitions. Her original, creative approach connects science and society.
Elanie Rodermond
Associate Professor in Criminology, VU University Amsterdam, Faculty of Law / Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement
Elanie Rodermond was the first in the Netherlands to examine all Dutch terrorism suspects and their life-course and careers prior to their committing acts of terrorism. Her research borrows methods from the fields of criminology and law. Her findings show, among other things, that perpetrators of terrorism have more in common with common criminals than previously thought. She cautions against setting up special counter-terrorism units because they can hamper resocialisation and, in some cases, even reinforce radical ideas. Rodermond also focuses on female perpetrators (a group often neglected in research), online extremism and intervention strategies.