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  • Andrew Dunn: Page 135

    Academic Librarian.

  • 2020 news

    Browse news relating to the Division of Biomedical Services from 2020.

  • Keep you titbits, let’s have full equality, inclusion and representation

    Posted by Robin Clarke in School of Museum Studies Blog on July 27, 2017 50 years ago today, the Sexual Offences Act became law. It partially decriminalised homosexual acts between men. The ‘partial’ is important here as inequality still existed.

  • University cricketers highlight the need for blood donation

    Players from the University of Leicester first and seconds cricket team and development squad dressed in their cricket whites to donate blood and help save and improve lives.

  • Last chance for frontline healthcare workers to register for flagship empathy course

    The Stoneygate Centre for Empathic Healthcare, based at the University of Leicester, has created the Putting Evidence-Based Empathy into Practice workshop to help healthcare professionals develop empathy habits they can use in their clinical practice.

  • Museum of the Bible opens

    The Museum of the Bible opened today (Friday) in Washington DC. The 430,000 sq ft Museum has involved University of Leicester academic Professor Gordon Campbell.

  • Call for proposals - Museological Review Issue 27

    School of Museum Studies, Leicester Museological Review

  • In the Footsteps of Caesar: the archaeology of the first Roman invasions of Britain

    The University of Leicester School of Archaeology and Ancient History In the Footsteps of Caesar project

  • Thesis examination

    (2)9.46 A higher doctorate may be awarded on the basis of an examination of the written thesis without a viva voce examination. (2)9.47 The examination shall normally be completed within six months of the examiners receiving the higher doctorate candidate’s thesis.

  • 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.

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