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

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Artworks

    The Engineering Building contains two artworks by the influential 20th century artist Sir Eduardo Paolozzi. Learn more about The Tapestry and The Bronze.

  • New professor of Nursing and Child Health appointed

    The University of Leicester is delighted to announce the appointment of Dr Joseph Manning MBE as Professor of Nursing and Child Health within the School of Healthcare.

  • Dating the Social Death of the Eighteenth Century Criminal. By Rachel Bennett

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in Carceral Archipelago on June 23, 2015 In April 2015 I presented a paper at a conference held at the University of Leicester entitled ‘When is Death?’ The conference was organised by members of the Wellcome Trust funded project, Harnessing the...

  • Leicester supports post-COVID regional recovery

    The University of Leicester is working with employers, partners and local leaders to help support post-COVID regional recovery in the East Midlands, by encouraging skills growth, create jobs and help retain expertise and knowledge within the area.

  • Young Leicester artists raise money for charity through ‘Hopefulness’ exhibition

    A new exhibition featuring the work of budding artists from Leicester College has opened at the Attenborough Arts Centre, the University of Leicester’s public arts programme.  The Art and Design students were asked what ‘hope’ meant to them.

  • Our current exhibition ‘Joe Orton in 1964’

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on June 3, 2014 When Joe Orton’s play Entertaining Mr Sloane was performed in the West End in 1964, it provoked both virulent criticism and glowing praise – he enjoyed both in equal measure.    The critic W.

  • Tackling sexual violence

    Professor Lisa Smith discusses how new DNA kits are helping to ensure survivors of sexual violence find justice.

  • Unravelling the Minion genome

    Based on what we know of the minions from the popular Despicable Me films – and the Minions movie current playing at cinemas – they could, in theory, have a complex genetic make-up similar to humans, according to Natural Sciences students Krisho Manoharan and Ruth Sang Jones.

  • Olympus IX81 - Inscoper

    Find out more about the Olympus Cell^R/Scan^R imaging system which can be found in the Advanced Imaging Facility.

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