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7511 results for: ‘jsp226远程教育ssh毕业设计✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.oyCRHRxhxnoZ’

  • Bahrain

    We welcome students from Bahrain. Find out about entry requirements, the Bahraini student community and other country-specific information.

  • Bacteriophages

    Bacteriophage (phage) are small viruses that infect bacteria. They are either lytic: they undergo a productive infection within a bacterial cell causing death or they are lysogenic. The study of phage can be utilised for the treatment of antibiotic resistant infection.

  • Links to societies

    Browse links to societies related to the work we do in the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, and see our local contact for each society.

  • Ecuadorian thoughts on religion, power and the subaltern classes

    Posted by Christian De Vito in Carceral Archipelago on July 10, 2016 The Iglesia de la Merced , in Quito, was built in 1737 on the remains of the original church that dated from 1538 – four years after the foundation of the city.

  • Where Empires Meet

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on May 3, 2015   In a previous blog , I wrote on the theme of the politics of comparison, of the connected history of circulation and mobility that underpins the CArchipelago project team’s approach to the historiography,...

  • Clare Anderson

    I am a professor of history, with interests in colonialism and colonial societies across the British Empire. I am especially interested in the history of confinement.

  • Higher Education

    Cancers are responsible for millions of death every year. The study of cancer biology is therefore one of the largest areas of scientific interest. Cancer cells develop specific hallmarks through a series of mutations in both oncogenes and tumour-suppressor genes.

  • Livecyte 2

    The Livecyte 2 can be found in the Advanced Imaging Facility. Learn more about the equipment.

  • Our trials

    Learn more about the active and completed trials in the Leicester Clinical Trials Unit.

  • Leicester student mentored by ITV News Central wins Breaking Into News competition

    Sally Wynter from the Department of History of Art and Film has won the 2015 Breaking Into News initiative, run by ITV News and Media Trust. She won the competition after developing a news report that showed how a local charity was tackling homelessness.

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