Campus day 2024

You are warmly welcome to Campus Day on September 4th from 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM!

Campus Day is for all students at Campus Flemingsberg. Come and meet students from Karolinska Institutet, KTH, the Red Cross University College, SMI, and Södertörn University. There will be performances and speeches on stage. Enjoy music, play ping-pong, or take the campus quiz and get a lunch! (Limited availability)

You can also talk to the student union for your institution and meet other services such as health and wellness, the library, academic advisors, and more!

When? September 4th, 11:00 AM to 1:00 PM
Where? On the lawn behind Södertörn University Library, Alfred Nobels Allé 15.

Published On: 27 August 2024
  • Cecilia Bergh: “We’ll succeed – it just needs hard work”

    After almost 25 years’ concerted struggle to disseminate her successful eating disorder treatment, Cecilia Bergh wants to shift up a gear. Her goal is to digitalise her technique and turn the Mandometer support tool into a consumer product.

  • Chris Heister: “Everyone who has made this journey feels as though they’re fighting the system a bit.”

    Even if Chris Heister shifts down a gear when she leaves her role as council leader in Stockholm, she is unlikely be drawing on her pension any time soon. The class journey she has made from growing up in a countryside idyll, north of Stockholm, has given her a momentum that continually drives her forward.

  • Evren Alici set to make cancer a liveable illness

    A recent study could pave the way to treating a type of bone marrow cancer. The aim is to transform the cancer from being incurable to a disease that it is possible to live with. The research behind the study was conducted in Evren Alici’s group at Campus Flemingsberg.

  • Karin Mellström: “Co-operation is the key to success”

    After 10 years as a start-up, CellProtect Nordic Pharmaceuticals has taken a major step forward. Our patient and careful work is now bearing fruit, explains Karin Mellström, CEO and founder. Looking back on her career, she sums it up by saying: “I’d never been bored for a second!”

  • Matti Sällberg: “Vital to contribute facts to the debate”

    During the course of the pandemic, he has appeared on an almost daily basis in the morning papers or on the TV news. Matti Sällberg fast became an expert the media called for help explaining everything from vaccine development to the spread of infection.