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15459 results for: ‘《TON Meme Party》链游源码开发定制一站式服务✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.zXqbRxmzIrNhREj’

  • Natalie Armstrong

    Natalie Armstrong is a Senior Lecturer in Social Science Applied to Health, and the Co-lead of the SAPPHIRE group.

  • Parents, carers and families

    Get more information for parents, carers and families of students applying to the University of Leicester.

  • Notes for contributors

    Find out more about how to submit original material to the Museological Review - the online journal edited by PhD students in Museum Studies.

  • gboland

    Writer as Intellectual and Physical Drifter: Dr Rob M Francis reflects on his role as David Bradshaw Creative Writer in Residence and two of his favourite Oxford sites Posted by gboland in Waugh and Words on July 3, 2019   It’s been an absolute pleasure to be the...

  • Ripple: Publication of the Students’ Union

    Posted by Ceri Ashwell in Library Special Collections on January 29, 2014 Front cover 1952 Welcome to our first blog post! The aim of the blog is to expand awareness of the items within our collection and of the resources we have available.

  • Doomsday Scenarios? Decisions, Deals and The Donald

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on February 7, 2017   Professor Rolland Munro discusses the difference between decision making, and doing deals.

  • Prevent duty

    Learn more about the Prevent duty, set in place by the government, but adhered to by us at the University of Leicester.

  • The many languages of Sue Townsend

    Posted by Simon Dixon in Library Special Collections on August 22, 2014 The Special Collections team has been joined for the last couple of weeks by Claire Preval , an undergraduate intern from the Department of the History of Art and Film.

  • Jennifer Smith Maguire

    Jennifer is Senior Lecturer in Cultural Production and Consumption. Her research focuses on the intersection of processes of cultural production and consumption in the construction of markets, tastes and value.

  • Ethnic minority and poorer children more likely to die in intensive care

    Children from ethnic minority backgrounds and those living in areas with higher levels of child poverty are more likely to die in intensive care than White children and those from the least deprived areas, new study by University of Leicester researchers shows

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