The Leicester Institute for Advanced Studies

Supported groups

Learn more about the groups supported by the The Leicester Institute for Advanced Studies.

Deliberate Dying Group – an interdisciplinary working group

We have no choice about the fact of our death, as we will all die. Deliberate dying is about making choices (or having choices made for us) about the place and manner of our death - whether through end-of-life planning or choices about level of medical care, such as resuscitation. Some may plan the end of their life through suicide or need the help of others in assisted dying. These are complex choices and deliberate dying is not a moment, but a process. It involves the dying person and the institutional and personal systems around them. It must also include the wider social, cultural and legal constellations around individuals, including belief. Most people do not achieve the death that they wish for, so there is an urgent need for new approaches to promote holistic understanding around deliberate dying across these contexts – hopefully leading to practical interventions to enabling more of us to achieve a ‘good death’.

Exploration of past approaches to death and dying can enable us to question the current ‘taken-for-granted’, providing a context and focus for discussion in the modern world. This project will use the prism of the past to illuminate the spectrum of issues underlying deliberate dying, enabling the development of a robust academic basis on which to build future approaches.

Who is involved?

Contact us

If you have an interest in this developing interdisciplinary research area, please email any member of the team.

Migration, Mobility and Citizenship Network

The Migration, Mobility and Citizenship (MMC) Network has been created with the aim to foster new interdisciplinary collaborations concerning migration, mobility and citizenship within and across the University’s three Colleges and will be the vehicle by which we attract significant research grant income, build capacity, enhance the research environment and develop real-world impact. The network aims to draw inspiration from the lived experience of mobility, migration and citizenship in the everyday lives of the residents of Leicester and beyond. Socially, economically and culturally Leicester’s communities and institutions have been transformed by migration in the post-war era. The location of the University gives the network access to this migration resource, enabling comparisons with migration processes in other larger (and smaller) urban locations.

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