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  • Lin Feng

  • The Bulletin Leicester research reveals dramatic increase in baby virus admissions

    In this episode of The Bulletin from the University of Leicester News Centre: Research reveals 'dramatic increase' in baby virus admissions to Leicester's hospitals University professor joins stars in cancer fight ‘Hijacking’ of religious symbols by extremists...

  • LeicestershireLive Women in Business Awards 2021

    On Thu 9 September we were proud to sponsor the Lifetime Achievement award at the LeicestershireLive Women in Business Awards 2021.

  • Spring seminar series 2003

    Browse our 2003 spring seminar series in the Victorian Studies Centre.

  • Who Cares for Academics?

    Posted by eulus in School of Business Blog on May 6, 2016   In this blog, Eda Ulus and Charlotte Smith ask us to think about academics and whether they are allowed to express emotion.

  • Salvador Macip

    The academic profile of Dr Salvador Macip, Professor of Molecular Medicine at University of Leicester

  • School of English Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 2

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • 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.

  • The forgotten success of penal transportation reform in late Imperial Russia: the lowering of prison

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on June 8, 2016 By Mikhail Nakonechny . The late Imperial Russian prison and exile system is almost unequivocally considered to be the traditional embodiment of brutality, institutional inhumanity and injustice.

  • 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.

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