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14330 results for: ‘departments psychology news sluckin’

  • Nobel Prize: How Penrose, Genzel and Ghez helped put black holes at the centre of modern astrophysic

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 7 October 2020 The award of this year’s Nobel prize in physics to Roger Penrose, Reinhard Genzel and Andrea Ghez will be greeted with enormous pleasure by physicists and astronomers worldwide.

  • Physics & Astronomy: Page 11

    SVOM Integration of Leicester’s MXT Optics Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 30 June 2021 The SVOM MXT telescope is being integrated by CNES in Toulouse, including the optics unit built at Leicester.

  • The Loved One – University of Leicester

    Evelyn Waugh Book Group: September 2014 'The Loved One'

  • What Business Schools could learn from My Local Bakery

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on January 29, 2014 Professor Martin Parker, Director of Research at the School, challenges the arguments underpinning mainstream accounts of Business and Management within his recently published co-edited collection.

  • Convict Labor and Its Commemoration: the Mitsui Miike Coal Mine Experience

    Posted by abarker in Carceral Archipelago on January 9, 2017 By Miyamoto Takashi Note : This article is reprinted with permission from the author. It originally appeared in The Asia-Pacific Journal . Introduction Figure 1: Entrance of the Miyanohara tunnel, the Miike Coal Mine.

  • Risk, Crisis and Disaster Management MSc, by distance learning

    No business is risk free. No societies are immune from the impact of natural hazard and crisis.

  • Japanese

    Study Japanese courses for all levels at The University of Leicester.

  • Risk, Crisis and Disaster Management MSc, by distance learning

    No business is risk free. No societies are immune from the impact of natural hazard and crisis.

  • A System of Reintegration and Control: The Dual Functionality of Regional Convict Depots in Western

    Posted by abarker in Carceral Archipelago on March 20, 2017 By Kellie Moss   Fremantle Prison, Western Australia (authors own image).   The history of convict confinement in Western Australia has been dominated by one towering limestone structure: Fremantle prison.

  • On multi-sited research and mono-sited (nationalist) memory

    Posted by Christian De Vito in Carceral Archipelago on May 26, 2015 Addressing convict transportation – the key feature in the Carceral Archipelago project – implies multi-sited research, that is, research in archives located in different places (and countries/continents).

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