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  • Resources

    Click here for links to resources designed for higher education students. Our university has the relevant resources and equipment to help you acheive academic success.

  • People

    We have a team of dedicated academic staff, associate tutors, visiting fellows and honorary visiting staff, who are passionate about The Centre for Urban History.

  • The origin of humans a tale of tangled roots

    Dr Daniel Zadik from the Department of Genetics has written an article for his blog examining evidence regarding where humans originated.

  • Leicester team visits Mexico to test deforestation detection by satellites

    A team of researchers led by Professor Heiko Balzter (pictured, left) from the Department of Geography and accompanied by Roselin Rodríguez García, Technical Co-ordinator of the GEF-Ambio El Ocote Conservation Project, visited Mexico in February as part of a UK...

  • Winter 2020 newsletter

    The October edition of the newsletter stated that we continue to sail into uncharted waters but at last our destination appears just visible on the horizon.

  • Funded opportunities

    Listed below are the funded studentship opportunities which are currently accepting research student applications.

  • Funding

    Details on the alternative sources of funding available for research projects.

  • Advanced Topics in Cancer Biology

    Module code: BS4004 This module comprises a series of lectures which provide a background to the molecular and cellular basis of cancer.

  • Has Tony Blair Turned Hayekian?

    Posted by Chris Grocott in School of Business Blog on April 22, 2015 Lecturer in Management and Economic History at the School, Chris Grocott , reckons so. This year, I ran the inaugural third year BA Management Studies module ‘Organisations in Economic Context’.

  • Putting satellite data in farmers’ hands to improve food security

    PhD project at University of Leicester aims to get more farmers in Kenya and the UK using Earth Observation (E.O) data, allowing them to plan better for extreme weather, boosting climate resilience and food security

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