In the UK we have an authoritarian nationalist government seemingly hell
bent on the destruction of our economy, so maybe give it a few years.

Maybe try Germany? Actually - wait until after their election in 2017?
Ditto for France.

On Wed, Nov 9, 2016, 06:33 Ricardo Padua <rpa...@brandeis.edu> wrote:

> Science in Brazil will struggle with the "new" government as well, so I
> wouldn't count on that.
>
> On Wed, Nov 9, 2016 at 12:56 AM, kaiser <kai...@caltech.edu> wrote:
>
> Yeah, given Europe and Canada are obvious, I think Brazil and Japan are
> actually viable alternatives if the first choices are getting too crowded.
> They do have synchrotrons and "internets".
>
>
>
> Sent from my T-Mobile 4G LTE Device
>
>
> -------- Original message --------
> From: "William G. Scott" <wgsc...@ucsc.edu>
> Date: 11/8/16 21:37 (GMT-08:00)
> To: CCP4BB@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
> Subject: [ccp4bb] just out of totally idle curiosity ...
>
> What’s the job situation in Europe looking like for refugee scientists
> these days?
>
>
>
> William G. Scott
> Director, Program in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
> Professor, Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
> and The Center for the Molecular Biology of RNA
> University of California at Santa Cruz
> Santa Cruz, California 95064
> USA
>
> http://scottlab.ucsc.edu
>
>
>
>
> --
> Ricardo Padua
> Postdoctoral fellow HHMI
> Kern Lab
> Brandeis University
> Waltham, MA
>
> --


[image: --]

David Briggs PhD
[image: https://]about.me/david_briggs
<https://about.me/david_briggs?promo=email_sig&utm_source=email_sig&utm_medium=email_sig&utm_campaign=external_links>

Reply via email to