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Babylonian Sources
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/ah3084
Module code: AH3084 The ancient Babylonians had a rich culture that is exceptionally well documented thanks to their practice of writing on clay tablets.
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Commercial Law in a Digital World
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/lw3314
Module code: LW3314 There are no lectures in this module, with all tuition occurring in 20 hours of seminars and two hours of interactive workshop.
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About us
https://le.ac.uk/cces/about-us
The Consumer and Essential Services Unit (CESU) combines legal and social policy expertise to explore the effects for consumers of regulation and provision of essential services.
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Gender, Crime and Deviance in Eighteenth Century Britain
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2025/hs3808
Module code: HS3808 This module explores a range of crimes and deviant behaviours in England and Wales during the ‘long eighteenth-century’ (c. 1680-1820) through the lens of gender.
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Babylonian Sources
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2025/ah3084
Module code: AH3084 The ancient Babylonians had a rich culture that is exceptionally well documented thanks to their practice of writing on clay tablets.
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Babylonian Sources
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2026/ah3084
Module code: AH3084 The ancient Babylonians had a rich culture that is exceptionally well documented thanks to their practice of writing on clay tablets.
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Gender, Crime and Deviance in Eighteenth Century Britain
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2026/hs3808
Module code: HS3808 This module explores a range of crimes and deviant behaviours in England and Wales during the ‘long eighteenth-century’ (c. 1680-1820) through the lens of gender.
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Gender, Crime and Deviance in Eighteenth Century Britain
https://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/hs3808
Module code: HS3808 This module explores a range of crimes and deviant behaviours in England and Wales during the ‘long eighteenth-century’ (c. 1680-1820) through the lens of gender.
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Surveillance and Power – University of Leicester
https://staffblogs.le.ac.uk/business/2014/10/21/the-protection-of-knowledge-as-the-production-of-ignorance/
Posted by Tomasz Wisniewski in School of Business Blog on October 21, 2014 Geoff Lightfoot and Tomasz Wisniewski, Senior Lecturers in the School’s Finance and Accounting Group, describe information asymmetry as a politically prevalent predicament about which we should all be...
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Free public event explores the 1911 ‘All India’ cricket tour of England
https://le.ac.uk/news/2019/september/30-cricket-event
A fascinating chapter in cricket history will be explored at a free public event on Tuesday 1 October when Dr Prashant Kidambi, Associate Professor of colonial urban history, discusses the first ever Indian tour of England in 1911.