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  • PhD by distance learning

    Find out more about the University of Leicester PhD in Politics and International Relations by Distance Learning.

  • Kingdoms of Ice and Snow: Exploration in Writing and Film

    Module code: EN3190 The exploration, mapping, and conquest of distant lands has long captured the British imagination, and formed an essential part of colonial ambitions.

  • Victorians: from Oliver Twist to The Picture of Dorian Gray A

    Module code: EN3028 If you enjoy a great, immersive read, fascinating characters and stories, and thinking about the connections between literature and society, this module is for you.

  • Victorians: from Oliver Twist to The Picture of Dorian Gray

    Module code: EN3328 (double module) If you enjoy a great, immersive read, fascinating characters and stories, and thinking about the connections between literature and society, this module is for you.

  • Managing Value Creation Processes from Idea to Market

    Module code: MN7702 Success increasingly demands the nurturing of a culture which can efficiently harness value creation processes across all areas of organisational life.

  • Cancer Chemistry

    Module code: CH4206 Studies from Cancer Research UK show that 1 in 2 people in the UK born after 1960 will receive a cancer diagnosis at some point during their lives. It’s highly likely that it has affected you or someone you know during your lifetime.

  • The Latin World: Ancient, Medieval and Modern

    Module code: ML2020 This interdisciplinary module investigates the changing role of Latin in the classical and post-classical world.

  • Hilary Burgess

    Professor Hilary Burgess came to Leicester in 2010 from a position at the Open University, joining her husband Robert Burgess, who had been Vice-Chancellor since 1999.

  • Dialect in Diaspora: People and Places (PhD)

    Supervisor: Dr Jayne Carroll PhD Student: Eleanor Rye This project was carried out at The Institute for Name-Studies at the University of Nottingham as part of the Impact of Diasporas on the Making of Britain programme.

  • Living in Towns: Archaeological Approaches to Medieval Urbanism

    Module: AR2034  What did towns look like after Roman decline? When do we see a ‘rebirth’ of towns? Were medieval towns heavily fortified? How clean were medieval towns and households? Were medieval towns dominated by religious structures? These are...

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