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  • Claire's dissertation

    Read about Claire’s dissertation, Sanitized City, Sanitized History: A study into how the Italian Fascist regime engineered the narrative of Rome.

  • New Approaches to the Material World

    Archaeology and Ancient History's research in Transformative Technologies at the University of Leicester combines the study of past technologies and creative practices, with current theoretical and methodological innovations.

  • Third year fieldwork

    Find out about the exciting fieldwork you'll undertake during your third year studying with us. You will undertake an independent field-based project, which is is an exercise in practical, deductive geology and forms an important part of your degree.

  • COVID-19 death rates among ethnic minorities

    Exploring the disproportionate rates of COVID-19 related deaths among people from ethnic minorities.

  • New learning resources

    Browse all new learning resources that University of Leicester Library offers

  • Rethinking nuclear weapons strategies

    Our research has been influential in raising international awareness of nuclear threats, encouraging governments and policymakers to modernise their thinking.

  • Student accolades

    Find out more about some of our students’ achievements. Lorna Wheaton Lorna won First Place Poster Prize at the Royal Statistical Society conference in September 2023 and published her first paper in February 2024.

  • Applications

    See step-by-step guidance on how to apply for one of our postgraduate courses: choosing a course, gathering your documentation and completing our application form.

  • Punk project supported by University of Leicester expert nominated for major National Lottery Award

    A University of Leicester-supported, acclaimed exhibition celebrating the UK’s punk scene has been nominated for a National Lottery Award 2023.

  • First confirmed neutron star merger re-appears from behind the Sun

    A research team including astronomers and astrophysicists at the Universities of Warwick and Leicester had to wait over 100 days for the sight of the first confirmed neutron star merger to re-appear from behind the glare of the Sun.

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