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  • Programme for Employability Day 2025

    9.45am - 10.00am: Arrival and registration, Sir Bob Burgess Building (SBBB), main foyer 10.00am - 3.

  • Enterprise in the curriculum

    Partnerships with businesses are integral to the foundations upon which the University of Leicester School of Business builds its curriculum and student experience.

  • jbridges: Page 7

    This blog is a record of my experiences and work during the Mars Science Laboratory mission, from the preparation, landing on August 5th 2012 Pacific Time, and onwards...I will also post updates about our other Mars work on meteorites, ExoMars and new missions.

  • Publications

    Learn more about the publications produced by the academics and students in the Centre for English Local History.

  • Increasing the Retirement Age won’t solve the Pensions Crisis

    Posted by in School of Business Blog on December 5, 2013 Jo Grady, Lecturer in Human Resource Management and Industrial Relations at the School, responds to George Osbourne’s Autumn Statement, particularly on its proposal to increase the retirement age to 70. Speaking on LBC 97.

  • Investments Committee

    Terms of Reference and membership 2024-25 Role: By way of delegated authority from Finance and Infrastructure Committee, to monitor the University’s endowments investments policy and activities including strategy for, and performance of, endowed funds and investments.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 216

    Academic Librarian.

  • Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Lei

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Former childrens laureate Michael Morpurgo to speak to packed audience

    The University is to welcome the popular and award-winning children’s writer Michael Morpurgo as he delivers its 2017 Annual Creative Writing Lecture this week to a packed house.

  • The face of a king

    After the bones had been scanned, a 3D scan of the skull was sent to the University of Dundee where the muscles and skin were modelled using a computer process known as stereolithography.

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