Search

24464 results for: ‘V4.0 DJ527舞曲网站模版✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.VSKWzGYEznEyJs’

  • The Criminal Corpse and the Competing Claims of Justice and Anatomy. By Richard Ward

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on December 21, 2015 The later eighteenth century represents a particular moment when the competing claims of anatomy and criminal justice fought for supremacy over the criminal corpse.

  • Goal 3: Health and Wellbeing

    The third Sustainable Development Goal is to ensure healthy lives and promote wellbeing for all at all ages.

  • Life-Writing, Prisoners of War and the Carceral Archipelago

    Posted by Carrie Crockett in Carceral Archipelago on November 10, 2015 by Grace Huxford Lecturer in Nineteenth/Twentieth Century History, University of Bristol At the Carceral Archipelago conference held in September at the University of Leicester, I delivered a paper on...

  • Introducing Leicester’s Juno Team, University of Leicester

    Introduction to the University of Leicester's Jupiter scientists.

  • New scientific technique helps catch wildlife criminals

    DNA tests co-developed by scientists from the University of Leicester and Scotland’s wildlife forensic lab are helping to catch criminals involved in the illegal sale of protected bird species.

  • Dismemberment in Prehistory – Not Just for the Criminally Insane. By Shane McCorristine

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on November 23, 2015 Francisco Goya, “Great deeds! Against the dead!” (1810s). Source: Wikimedia Commons. For as long as humans have been around we have cut up, hacked, butchered, and mutilated corpses.

  • Plan a space mission from concept to launch

    Planning a space mission from its initial concept through to its design, assembly and take-off is now a reality thanks to the Department of Physics and Astronomy's Space Exploration Systems MSc, which sets students up for a career in the space industry by teaching...

  • The latest adventures of MS 210

    Posted by Simon Dixon in Library Special Collections on May 22, 2019 In a follow-up to his previous blog post,  The Beast in Me , Museum Studies PhD student Armand De Filippo reports on the most recent adventures of our “Ethiopic Manuscript”, MS 210.

  • Stem cells collected in late pregnancy herald advances in prenatal medicine

    Pioneering approach, developed by researchers with key input from the University of Leicester, means human development can be observed in late pregnancy for the first time

  • Partnership to equip ethnically diverse sports leaders of the future

    Leicester City’s Premier League-winning captain Wes Morgan, now part of the Premier League’s Advisory Board on ethnically diverse communities, was also on hand to meet the students, and to explain an athlete’s role in promoting diversity and inclusion.

Back to top
MENU