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14490 results for: ‘departments psychology news sluckin’

  • Distrust of Employer’s Responses to COVID-19 Could Increase Both Presenteeism and Absenteeism in UK

    Posted by Chris Grocott in School of Business Blog on May 20, 2020 People’s trust in their employer’s response to COVID-19 will shape their attitudes to returning to the workplace, Professor Stephen Wood writes.

  • Collective performance-related pay systems may have more effect on performance than individualized p

    Posted by Stephen Wood in School of Business Blog on October 27, 2023 Stephen Wood, Professor of Management, University of Leicester School of Business.

  • Cooking Inauthentically Part 2: An Experiment with Acarajé – University of Leicester

    Deborah Toner, the Project's PI, describes her first experience of making acarajé, the perils of taking shortcuts and the value of traditional recipes

  • Reflecting upon Four Years of Criminal Corpses. By Rachel Bennett

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on September 6, 2016   Almost four years ago to the day I travelled to Leicester to attend my first PhD supervisory meeting armed with only a pen, a notepad and a head swirling with ideas.

  • A passion for researching public policy and management – University of Leicester

    One researcher's account of what inspired her passion for public policy research, and how she uses linguistic theory to investigate and address the complexity of public policy narratives and the effect their implementation has on people's day-to-day lives.

  • Tour du dopage: How do doping cyclists legitimate their cheating?

    Posted by csmith in School of Business Blog on July 1, 2015 With the Tour de France about to get under way, Charlotte Smith , Lecturer in Management at the School, considers the tension between sporting success and good sportsmanship Whether your interests are in sport or in...

  • The Sense of Touch for Archaeological Knowing

    Posted by kpijpers in School of Business Blog on March 20, 2018   In this post, Dr Kevin Pijpers discusses his recently completed doctoral research on how archaeologists use their senses, in particular their sense of touch and the relationship between archaeological...

  • Training apprentices: do small firms do it better?

    Posted by Dan Bishop in School of Business Blog on October 8, 2014 Dan Bishop, Lecturer in Employment Studies at the School, challenges the ‘large firm’ paradigm on which apprenticeship-oriented politics has conventionally been based Apprenticeships and small businesses have...

  • Inequality causes Corruption…or is it the other way around?

    Posted by awynne in School of Business Blog on September 25, 2015 Senior Lecturer in Public Financial Management at the School, Andy Wynne , briefly surveys one of today’s most pressing debates Last December, in Paris, attendees at an OECD donor symposium entitled...

  • The Morning after Brexit

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on July 5, 2016   Brendan Lambe. Lecturer in Finance and an Irish European, reflects on the meaning of the referendum.   On the morning of the 24 th of June we awoke to a Britain which had changed utterly.

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