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18182 results for: ‘Department of The History of Art and Film’

  • Study

    Find out more about studying within Cardiovascular Sciences at the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ. Learn about our courses and our research.

  • Space Park Leicester expands its service offering to space pioneers and community groups

    New Services offering will give more organisations the chance to benefit from its state-of-the-art resources and connect with leading engineers and academics

  • Sensational discovery of previously unseen Adrian Mole diary

    Teenage intellectual Mole achieved fame in the 1980s for his astute, observational journal cataloguing middle class domestic life in a Leicester household. He has been cited by some critics as “a modern day Pepys.

  • Careers

    We are here to support you in your career choices and to help you find the best career after you graduate. Learn more about your opportunities after you graduate with a degree in Geography from Leicester.

  • Collections

    A large part of the work undertaken in the East Midlands Oral History Archive has been to collect, preserve and catalogue existing collections. Find out more about the collections we have worked on.

  • Ground-breaking lawyer joins University Law Society as president

    Leicester University Law Society has announced that I. Stephanie Boyce will act as its president for the next academic year, starting in October 2022.

  • Privacy notice

    Read our privacy notice at The United Kingdom Aneurysm Growth Study

  • Get to know your brain

    Have you ever wondered how the brain actually works- what makes us move, feel, think, and listen? On Wednesday 14 March, in the midst of global Brain Awareness Week (BAW), a day of events will provide the public with an opportunity to learn all about how the brain functions.

  • Dr Glenn Cruse

    Find out more about Dr Glenn Cruse, alumnus of the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation.

  • Research shows global warming disaster could suffocate life on planet Earth

    Falling oxygen levels caused by global warming could be a greater threat to the survival of life on planet Earth than flooding, according to research led by Professor Sergei Petrovskii from the Department of Mathematics.

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