Search

14773 results for: ‘conference previous cms15 abstracts’

  • Ian Bradley

    It is with great regret that we have learned of the death of Ian Bradley, a member of the Economics Department for 40 years. Martin Hoskins with help from Deborah, Derek Deadman and Peter Jackson has written the tribute below.

  • Avoid

    The first step to reducing our negative impact on the environment is to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions from the outset.

  • Jim Roberts

    A Life Lived Well: Jim Roberts (1947-2023) Professor Suzanne MacLeod writes: James (Jim) Roberts was born into a working class-family in Liverpool in 1947.

  • University of Leicester establishes new independent investment company

    Midlands Mindforge Limited has been co-founded by University of Leicester and seven other research intensive universities in the Midlands, collectively Midlands Innovation.

  • Ground-breaking research celebrates 10 years

    Some of the 11,000 people who’ve taken part in the ground-breaking Leicester research study, EXCEED, gathered at the University of Leicester’s Sir Bob Burgess building last week to celebrate 10 years of the study

  • Our environment over a billion years: travel through time into Leicester’s deep past

    Experts at the University of Leicester host an evening exploring landscape change and biodiversity in the city and county on Thursday 23 March

  • Autumn 2020 newsletter

    We continue to sail into uncharted waters and Leicester City has experienced more challenges than many areas of the UK, however, our destination appears just visible on the horizon.

  • Health and Safety Committee

    See the Health and Safety Committee's terms of reference and membership, including details of their role, responsibilities, reporting hierarchy and meetings.

  • Leicester in the running for national University of the Year award

    The University of Leicester is in the running for a prestigious national University of the Year award.

  • Scientists deliver world-first lobster X-ray telescope mirror

    Space scientists at the University of Leicester have delivered a completely new type of super-lightweight X-ray telescope mirror to study the greatest explosions in the Universe since the Big Bang.

Back to top
MENU