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15049 results for: ‘museum studies’

  • Biochemical Mechanisms of Human Disease

    Module code: MB3001 This module will be centred on the experimental approaches used to investigate a range of human diseases.

  • Financial Modelling

    Module code: MN7024 This module covers the methods used in applied financial modelling, and you'll explore how quantitative techniques can be employed to analyse financial information and aid decision making.

  • Biochemical Mechanisms of Human Disease

    Module code: MB3001 This module will be centred on the experimental approaches used to investigate a range of human diseases.

  • Financial Modelling

    Module code: MN7024 This module covers the methods used in applied financial modelling, and you'll explore how quantitative techniques can be employed to analyse financial information and aid decision making.

  • Giving from the USA

    Learn more about your options if you would like to give towards the University of Leicester from the USA.

  • Financial Modelling

    Module code: MN7024 This module covers the methods used in applied financial modelling, and you'll explore how quantitative techniques can be employed to analyse financial information and aid decision making.

  • L

    Lexis+ (LexisPlus) Legal research database from LexisNexis covering UK and foreign national jurisdictions. This combines three previous products (Lexis Library, Lexis PSL, and Lexis International) into one database.

  • Harnessing the power of rain

    Physics students taking the Physics Special Topics module have investigated how viable rainfall is as a source of energy - particularly in comparison to solar energy.

  • Suraj Pathak

    Clinical Research Fellow in Cardiac Surgery Background Suraj is a clinical research fellow in cardiac surgery. He initially trained as an engineer, completing a degree in Bioengineering from Imperial College London.

  • Archaeology of the Mediterranean: From the Late Bronze Age to the End of Antiquity

    Module code: AR2035 In this module we will explore the period between c.1400 BC and c.600 AD, examining the varied and important archaeologies of diverse powers and regions which emerged and interacted to significant effect across the first millennia BC and AD.

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