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  • Contact us

    Get in touch with the team behind the Complete Works of the Evelyn Waugh project at the University of Leicester.

  • Medical Biochemistry BSc

    To make big breakthroughs in diagnosing and treating disease, we often have to look at life at the molecular level. Studying biochemistry in this way will help you tackle the world’s most pressing health issues.

  • Retrovirus

    a retrovirus vector

  • Geography at Leicester

    Find out more about Geography at the University of Leicester. We research and teach across three core strands of the discipline - Human Geography, Physical Geography, and Geographic Information Science (GIS).

  • International experts convene for groundbreaking workshop on empathic leadership education

    A one-day workshop to develop the world's first comprehensive curriculum on empathic leadership for healthcare professionals is set to take place.

  • Transforming scholarship

    The Centre for Hate Studies is renowned for undertaking pioneering and transformative research.

  • Up to a third of people with type 2 diabetes not taking prescriptions properly

    Leicester researchers have used a unique screening approach to suggest that nearly a third of people with type 2 diabetes may be putting their health at risk because they are not taking their medications correctly.

  • Leicester VC to reflect on Century of Change in Lit&Phil lecture

    University of Leicester Vice-Chancellor, Professor Nishan Canagarajah, has spoken of the ‘tremendous honour’ at being invited to deliver a prestigious public lecture to the body which helped establish the University more than a Century ago.

  • Reflecting upon Four Years of Criminal Corpses. By Rachel Bennett

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on September 6, 2016   Almost four years ago to the day I travelled to Leicester to attend my first PhD supervisory meeting armed with only a pen, a notepad and a head swirling with ideas.

  • Better peatland management could cut half a billion tonnes of carbon

    However, because large populations rely on these peatlands for their livelihoods, it may not be realistic to expect all agricultural peatlands to be fully returned to their natural condition in the near future.

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