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18700 results for: ‘departments law news events law events’

  • Leicester to become first UK city to join global initiative against urban diabetes

    Leicester will join the likes of Copenhagen, Mexico City, Rome and Shanghai in becoming part of the Cities Changing Diabetes programme to tackle the dramatic rise of type 2 diabetes in urban areas.

  • Materials Chemist Awarded Prestigious Marie Curie Fellowship

    The Materials Centre has recently welcomed Dr Rodolfo Marin Rivera, who has been granted a Marie Curie Individual fellowship to carry out research in the field of process engineering for sustainable recovery of valuable metals by ELECTRO-IONometallurgy.

  • Anna scores soughtafter opportunity to work within beating heart of the television industry

    PhD researcher Anna McKay from our School of History, Politics and International Relations will be working within the ‘beating heart’ of the television industry as one of only six emerging academics from across the UK to be selected to take part in the first ‘TV PhD’...

  • MRC scientist at Leicester provides expert view

    A scientist based at our University has provided expert reaction to alternative for animals during toxicity testing.

  • Renowned theatre cast including actor Ralph Fiennes pay tribute to Leicester in their reimagining of Shakespeares Richard III

    A stellar acting cast featuring Hollywood stars has paid homage to our University in its unconventional retelling of Shakespeare's Richard III.

  • Professor Clare Anderson appointed as trustee of Royal Museums Greenwich

    The University of Leicester’s Professor Clare Anderson has been appointed by the Prime Minister as one of six new Trustees of the Royal Museums Greenwich. Anderson is a Professor of History at the University, Director of the Institute for Advanced Studies.

  • What will the museums of tomorrow look like

    Leading figures from some of the world’s foremost cultural organisations will discuss the leading-edge approaches that will shape the design of our future museums and galleries.

  • Research suggests people who want to prevent immigration to the UK are less happy than those who welcome it

    People who want to stop further immigration to the UK are less happy than those who welcome it, and politicians are part of the reason for this, new research shows.

  • How the Bank of England was built by pirate booty

    The remarkable similarities between the invention of the novel and of commercial corporations such as the Bank of England in the seventeenth century can inform present-day theories of management, according to Professor Martin Parker from the School of Management.

  • Leicester conservation project to save threatened wildflowers from extinction

    A new project at our University hopes to save rare and threatened local wildflowers from across Leicestershire and Rutland from extinction.

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