Overslaan en naar de inhoud gaan
English
Tijd
20:00 – 21:30
Locatie

Academy Building
Broerstraat 5
Groningen
Nederland

Tickets
€ 4 / € 2 with SG-card / free for students

End of Daylight Saving Time and Then?

Marijke Gordijn

Every spring and winter we force ourselves into a tiny jetlag by switching the clock an hour forth and back. Hear what chronobiologists say about the drawbacks and benefits of daylight saving time.

This phenomenon we know as daylight saving time, was introduced in the Netherlands in 1977 due to the oil crisis. By introducing these measures the Dutch government wanted to make sure that society would profit from every hour of daylight, and save energy by doing so. Forty years later we are not so sure if this is an effective measure, both in terms of economic benefits, as the effects of this biennial jetlag on our health.

The debate is certainly not limited to the Dutch, but is transboundary. In August 2018, the European Union decided to reconsider daylight saving time. What will be the optimal choice for our ‘new’ permanent time? What arguments should this decision be based upon? Unity between countries? Or safety and health of citizens?

Marijke Gordijn is founder, shareholder and senior scientist of Chrono@Work where she focusses on improving the application of basic chronobiological knowledge in society. After finishing her Masters in Biology at the University of Groningen, she worked for more than 25 years as a scientist specialized in human chronobiology and sleep at both the department of Chronobiology at the University of Groningen and the department of Psychiatry at the UMCG.

Zie ook

Arts, Culture and Media Lustrum Lecture
Stefan Collini, Pascal Gielen, Liesbeth Korthals Altes
Universities and the Democratization of Culture
English

The process commonly referred to as the ‘democratization of culture’ involves not only a pluralization of the categories of art and culture, that is, the acceptance of a much wi

Placeholder
Thomas W. Laqueur
Writing Cultural Histories
English

The ancient Greek Philosopher Diogenes the Cynic was perhaps the first to tell the plausible and, at the same time, impossible truth that the dead human body really is nothing,