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  • Reaching for the stars

    A PhD student at our University has been recognised internationally for her research into life on Mars. Berivan Esen is amongst the 30 women around the world who have been awarded the prestigious Zonta International Amelia Earhart Fellowship for 2018-19.

  • Pioneering approach in family courts to support domestic abuse victims better

    The UK Government has begun a pilot pioneering an approach in family courts to support victims of domestic abuse, informed by Leicester research.

  • Medical Microbiology BSc

    Infectious diseases account for a third of all deaths. It’s a hard stat to take in, but it’s why we keep studying the microscopic organisms that cause them.

  • Mythbusting coronavirus from Amazon to Zoflora: cleaning facts and fiction

    How long can coronavirus survive on your Amazon parcels, and should you disinfect your shopping trolly when going to the supermarket? According Dr Primrose Freestone, Associate Professor in Clinical Microbiology at The University of Leicester, it can take up to 24hrs for...

  • Coronavirus advice for students and staff

    The University of Leicester is continuing to monitor coronavirus, or COVID-19, which is not known to have affected our staff or students.

  • Study suggests corporations could be destroyed by psychopathic leadership

    According to new research led by the Universities of Leicester and Coventry, investing in companies that have psychopaths in their higher echelons of power could be harmful to your wealth.

  • Who is influencing British politicians?

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on April 8, 2016 Take the Unlock Democracy quiz to see if you know.

  • PhD students

    Find out more about the work of PhD students in Media and Communications

  • Nick Brindle

    Information and contact details for Professor Nick Brindle, Professor of Cell Signalling at the University of Leicester.

  • Biological Sciences (Neuroscience) MBiolSci

    Computers are powerful machines, but no computer is more powerful or complex than the human brain. Studying neuroscience will reveal how brains and nervous systems work in animals, including humans – and what happens when something goes wrong.

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