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14069 results for: ‘museum studies’

  • Watching the Detectives: Crime on the Page and Screen

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  • News Centre privacy notice

    Learn more about how your data is handled by Leicester regarding the News Centre.

  • Watching the Detectives: Crime on the Page and Screen

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  • Literary Leicester proves popular once again

    Over 3000 people attended an event at the University’s Literary Leicester Festival this year, with great feedback from audiences that travelled to the campus and around the city to take part in our annual celebration of the written word.

  • Changing the world, one story at a time. Humanitarian Society scoops two awards for groundbreaking journalism

    A newsletter produced by University of Leicester's Humanitarian Society has been recognised by the Student Publication Association.

  • Winners of short story competition announced

    The winners of the Vaughan Centre for Lifelong Learning Short Story Competition have been announced.

  • Demand for free colonial history lessons spikes

    Free home schooling packs about Britain’s colonial past have seen a surge in popularity. Requests for the Colonial Countryside packs, written by author and history teacher Dan Lyndon-Cohen, have gone from one or two a week to more than 30 a day.

  • Law of Tort

    Module code: LW1150 Road accidents, disruptive neighbours, untrue stories in the press and invasions of personal privacy can all cause harm. The law of tort is the mechanism by which victims of harm can obtain remedies or prevent that harm from arising in the first place.

  • Law of Tort

    Module code: LW1150 Road accidents, disruptive neighbours, untrue stories in the press and invasions of personal privacy can all cause harm. The law of tort is the mechanism by which victims of harm can obtain remedies or prevent that harm from arising in the first place.

  • Law of Tort

    Module code: LW1150 Road accidents, disruptive neighbours, untrue stories in the press and invasions of personal privacy can all cause harm. The law of tort is the mechanism by which victims of harm can obtain remedies or prevent that harm from arising in the first place.

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