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  • Blog: New Political Order? The strange demise of red and blue

    In this expert blog, Paul Baines, Professor of Political Marketing, explains what’s happened to the Tories and Labour.

  • Keep Calm and Scroll On!

    Posted by Sarah Wood in Library Special Collections on March 27, 2020       Hello from our homes!   Ian, our Library Assistant will be ready to greet new users when we reopen! We had to bid a sad farewell to our archive store and reading room last week, as...

  • Contact Employer Services

    Learn more and get in contact with Employer Services to help your identification, attraction and recruitment needs.

  • Professional services staff

    Meet our professional and technical services staff in Cardiovascular Sciences at Leicester. Find out how to get in touch with them via telephone and email.

  • Grantham, Lincolnshire

    Listen to speakers from Grantham, Lincolnshire from a range of backgrounds as part of the dialect project between researchers from Nottingham Trent University and the University of Leicester.

  • Physics Special Topics

    Module code: PA4980 By producing the department’s own Journal of Physics Special Topics, you will gain experience as a researcher, author and editor, and referee of scientific papers.

  • Fieldschool (UoL)

    Module code: AR2602 Fieldwork is one of the most fundamental, exciting, and rewarding parts of our discipline. We want to support you in experiencing that too.

  • Costs and what's included

    Information about fees for our postgraduate accommodation, including details of all-inclusive rent and prepayment.

  • Traumatised children worldwide to be helped by major project

    Professor Panos Vostanis from the Greenwood Institute of Child Health based at the University's School of Psychology will be embarking on a global mission to help child victims of trauma in low income countries around the world.

  • Governments more likely to be responsive when strong public opposition is voiced

    Governments often ignore public opposition to their policies but they are far less likely to do so when public opinion is strongly and consistently expressed through surveys and on the streets, says a University of Leicester Politics expert.

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