Search

21968 results for: ‘【25年】即时沟通AI在线客服系统源码 外贸多语言翻译聊天多商户客服坐席【YZ22】✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.NYVrFqHmFSJ’

  • Crime Scene Examination

    Module code: CH7201 In this module, you will explore the processes of crime scene examination, ranging from the initial assessment to the preservation of crime scenes.

  • Crime Scene Examination

    Module code: CH7201 In this module, you will explore the processes of crime scene examination, ranging from the initial assessment to the preservation of crime scenes.

  • January blues Students Union launches 2018 with destress events to ease exam nerves

    January marks the start of a new year, and, for students across the University, the beginning of exam season. Hours spent in the library revising and writing essays can leave you feeling stressed out and tired.

  • Academic staff

    Contact details for our academic staff.

  • Leicester student mentored by ITV News Central wins Breaking Into News competition

    Sally Wynter from the Department of History of Art and Film has won the 2015 Breaking Into News initiative, run by ITV News and Media Trust. She won the competition after developing a news report that showed how a local charity was tackling homelessness.

  • Cancer Studies

    Find your research degree supervisor in Cancer Studies at Leicester.

  • Spring seminar series 2004

    Browse our 2004 spring seminar series in the Victorian Studies Centre.

  • World Press Freedom day is celebrated annually on the 3rd May

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on May 4, 2018 2018 is the 25 th anniversary and the focus is upon the rule of law. Find out more about the events on the UNESCO official website.

  • Correspondence of war: translating the Bejach letters

    Posted by Eleanor Bloomfield in Library and Learning Services on October 25, 2023 Please note that this post contains content relating the Holocaust.

  • Research into agricultural revolution in AngloSaxon England sheds new light on medieval land use

    Researchers from our University will be shedding new light on how an ‘agricultural revolution’ in Anglo-Saxon England fueled the growth of towns and markets as part of a new project investigating medieval farming habits.

Back to top
MENU