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23984 results for: ‘students announcements international women2019s day review’

  • Introducing Leicester’s Juno Team, University of Leicester

    Introduction to the University of Leicester's Jupiter scientists.

  • Planetary Magnetospheres and Ionospheres

    Our research focuses on the processes that take place in the outer gaseous environments of solar system bodies, involving the coupling of the planetary upper atmosphere and magnetic field with the solar wind plasma that blows continuously outward from the Sun.

  • Stephanie Bowry

    Museum Studies PhD graduate Stephanie Bowry discusses her three-year Leverhulme Early Career Fellowship, which investigates the spatial, conceptual and experimental relationships between gardens and galleries in England from 1500-1750.

  • Leicester space experts drive forward mission to find habitable worlds

    Professor Martin Barstow is leading a consortium developing a UK instrument contribution to the the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO).

  • HumanKind

    We are looking afresh at Calke Abbey’s past, reassessing the stories told about this place and exploring their potential to foster more meaningful connections.

  • Space Park Leicester to appear at US Commercial Space Week

    William Wells joins the UK government’s delegation at the event which will attract more than 5,000 attendees from over 30 countries

  • Leicester expert to attend Nobel Peace Prize Forum as nuclear war threat intensifies

    An expert in global nuclear politics from the University of Leicester has raised concerns about the decline of world security amid tensions between the West and Russia – but has some words of optimism for the future.

  • Leicestershire business leaders celebrated at regional awards

    Professor Philip Baker, Pro Vice-Chancellor for Research and Enterprise at the University of Leicester, spoke at the evening’s awards ceremony to affirm the University’s commitment to enterprise and innovation in its Centenary year, and also presented the Overall...

  • How Muhammad Ali changed the way we see sport

    Muhammad Ali, who passed away last week at the age of 74, changed the way we see sport and the inequalities that both feed and dramatise it, according to John Williams from the Department of Sociology.

  • New research on global surface ozone levels highlights regions and populations most affected by air pollution

    New research led by the Universities of Leicester and Edinburgh and a number of institutions worldwide has analysed ozone levels across the globe, with some regions of East Asia showing increasing levels of ozone air pollution.

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