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18665 results for: ‘departments law news events law events’

  • Transport

    Learn more about the collections about EMOHA in the East Midlands Oral History Archive.

  • Research Skills Training for Autumn 2025

    Posted by William Farrell in Library and Learning Services on September 24, 2025 Another term begins, and so too does our research skills training program.

  • Criminology

    Find your research degree supervisor in Criminology at Leicester.

  • A Promising Future: Convict Voyages to Western Australia by Kellie Moss

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in Carceral Archipelago on October 6, 2014 During a recent research trip to the State Library of Western Australia I had the opportunity to examine the journal compiled by William Smith, Surgeon Superintendent, on board the Merchantman’s second...

  • A

    Acta Sanctorum All 68 volumes of the Acta Sanctorum as published by the Société des Bollandistes. The encyclopaedia documents the lives of Saints from 1643 to 1940, organised by each saint's feast day.

  • Dartmoor dig uncovers 'stunning' Early Bronze Age burial cist

    University of Leicester's Dr Laura Basell is working with Dartmoor National Park to analyse a newly discovered Bronze Age cist.

  • Webinars with Blackboard Collaborate

    Virtual classrooms, otherwise known as webinars, are a great way of teaching from a distance.

  • Facilities for students

    Lab experience and fieldwork experience are key to developing practical skills and fundamental understanding of the scientific process. We use specialist subject laboratories in Physics, Chemistry and Life Sciences at the University.

  • The library in the penal colony: Chekhov’s unsung gift to Sakhalin

    Posted by Carrie Crockett in Carceral Archipelago on June 7, 2017   Chekhov’s contribution to the cultural landscape of the Sakhalin penal colony (1868-1905), the establishment of several school libraries containing more than 2,200 volumes for the island’s...

  • Behavioural Finance

    Module code: EC7094 Classical finance borrows its framework of analysis from neoclassical economics. However, this framework paints a picture of human behaviour in which market participants are assumed to much more rational and far-sighted than they actually are.

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