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24524 results for: ‘offices press think leicester arts and culture 2016 is peter tatchell good for you’

  • Michelle Hadjiconstantinou

    The academic profile of Dr Michelle Hadjiconstantinou, Research Fellow in Behavioural Science at University of Leicester

  • Drying Congo peatlands threaten to accelerate climate change

    Study reveals how the Congo peatlands changed from being a major store of carbon to a source of damaging carbon dioxide emissions.

  • Roger Bettles Sports Centre

    See the wide range of fitness and sporting facilities at the Roger Bettles sports centre located in Oadby.

  • Spacecraft Systems Engineering

    Module code: EG7413 Spacecraft are now critical to everyday life, providing communication and navigation capability around the world, as well as allowing us to explore other planets. Leicester has a long history of building instruments for exciting and famous space missions.

  • Medicine MBChB (A100)

    Browse our entry requirements for the A100 Medicine MBChB course at the University of Leicester.

  • Physics and Astronomy

    Centenary celebrations Posted by Physics and Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 21 May 2025 The first students to study physics at what was then University College, Leicester were enrolled in 1925. A class of 10 students were enrolled, and a single lecturer appointed.

  • Find lost friends

    If you would like to get in touch with an old classmate or friend from your time at Leicester, please get in touch with the Alumni Relations team.

  • Equivalent qualifications and tests

    All our courses specify an IELTS score as the minimum English language requirement. This table shows the equivalent scores if you have taken a different test or qualification.

  • Borrowing

    See the length of time members can borrow items for, as well as how to return or request a book. requesting articles, chapters, books and journals not available in our collection from other libraries. Loaning or providing items from our collection to other libraries

  • New ‘cloaking device’ concept to shield sensitive tech from magnetic fields

    University of Leicester engineers have developed a design framework for a magnetic cloak designed to hide objects from magnetic fields, effectively making them ‘invisible’ to magnetic detection

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