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22354 results for: ‘offices careers new your career development service contact us’

  • Digital Media and Everyday Life

    Module code: MS2009 (double module) Digital media have become an essential element of our everyday lives. In this module we will examine the shifts that new media technologies have brought about in our daily routines and offer insights into the ways we interact with new media.

  • Digital Media and Everyday Life

    Module code: MS2009 (double module) Digital media have become an essential element of our everyday lives. In this module we will examine the shifts that new media technologies have brought about in our daily routines and offer insights into the ways we interact with new media.

  • Digital Media and Everyday Life

    Module code: MS2009 (double module) Digital media have become an essential element of our everyday lives. In this module we will examine the shifts that new media technologies have brought about in our daily routines and offer insights into the ways we interact with new media.

  • Researcher awarded grant to explore the international impact of attempts to change how antibiotics are prescribed

    A researcher from our University has been awarded a prestigious Research Councils grant to study antimicrobial resistance (AMR) from a new perspective.

  • Contemporary Issues in Economics, Finance and Business

    Module code: EC1025 This course is designed for students new to economics and who want to understand how to use economic models and methods to address real-world questions.

  • Contemporary Issues in Economics, Finance and Business

    Module code: EC1025 This course is designed for students new to economics and who want to understand how to use economic models and methods to address real-world questions.

  • Contemporary Issues in Economics, Finance and Business

    Module code: EC1025 This course is designed for students new to economics and who want to understand how to use economic models and methods to address real-world questions.

  • Leap in modelling human impact on climate may lead to early warning of climate disasters

    Mathematicians led by the University of Leicester have applied statistical mechanics to climate change detection and attribution for first time, showing how to separate the ‘signal’ of human-made climate change from the ‘noise’ of natural climate fluctuations

  • Gemma Hughes

    The academic profile of Dr Gemma Hughes, Associate Professor, Healthcare Management at University of Leicester

  • Mars Science Laboratory Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 15

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

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