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

  • Medical cannabis academic shares excitement of meeting Home Secretary Sajid Javid at 10 Downing Street

    Yewande Okuleye, a medical cannabis researcher within our School of History, Politics and International Relations, has spoken of her ‘excitement’ meeting Home Secretary Sajid Javid and the real-world application of her research into cannabis self-medication during an event at...

  • Kathryn Tempest

    The academic profile of Dr Kathryn Tempest, Lecturer in Roman History at Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ

  • Cardelle Fergusson

    Cardelle Fergusson graduated from the Leicester MBA in 2020 with a specialisation in marketing, after a recommendation from a colleague to study at the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ.

  • Posted by Sarah Graham in School of English Blog on June 17, 2014 After studying Joe Orton’s Entertaining Mr Sloane, and attending a workshop in the Joe Orton archive, held in the University’s David Wilson Library, third year English student Emma Ingleton was inspired to...

  • Cricket Country shortlisted for prestigious non-fiction prize

    A book by a Leicester academic exploring the untold history of the first All India cricket team has been shortlisted as one of six entries for the Wolfson History Prize 2020.

  • Dr Glenn Cruse

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

  • Biological Sciences (Microbiology) BSc

    Microorganisms. They might be small, but they tell us more about life on Earth than almost any other living things. You’ll learn how they’re both helpful and harmful, as well as the evolving role of microbiology in biotechnology, health and disease.

  • Biological Sciences (Microbiology) BSc

    Microorganisms. They might be small, but they tell us more about life on Earth than almost any other living things. You’ll learn how they’re both helpful and harmful, as well as the evolving role of microbiology in biotechnology, health and disease.

  • Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ President and Vice-Chancellor responds to new report on the value of a university degree

    Comment by Professor Sir Nishan Canagarajah

  • Monkeys and chimpanzees have created their own archaeological sites dating back hundreds of years

    Capuchin monkeys have created their own archaeological sites in Brazil, complete with nut-cracking tools that date back at least 600-700 years ago, according to recent research – and Dr Huw Barton from the Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµâ€™s School of Archaeology and Ancient History...

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