Search

9128 results for: ‘姓名配对测试源码 查看好友喜欢谁趣味网站源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.JgdVpXVvgOsPA’

  • Crime and Organisations

    Module code: CR3504 This module introduces you to the key theoretical and contemporary debates in the study of white collar crime and the much broader category, 'crimes of the powerful'.

  • The British Antislavery Movement, 1787-1833

    Module code: HS3768 By the 1780s, Britain had become the world’s largest slave-trading nation, shipping around 40,000 slaves per year to its colonies in the New World.

  • Two thousand visitors expected to attend Family Day at Botanic Garden

    The University of Leicester Botanic Garden will open its gates to members of the public next week for its annual family day.

  • Fieldschool (Self-organised)

    Module code: AR2603 Fieldwork is one of the most fundamental, exciting, and rewarding parts of our discipline. We want to support you in experiencing that too.

  • Urban Conservation MA

    This is for you if... you want to increase your historical knowledge of cities, conservation and heritage and apply your learning in a practical setting.

  • Events

    Upcoming and past events from the School of Arts, Media and Communication

  • Student feedback

    Feedback to students The quality of feedback provided to students about their academic performance is a fundamental element of the University of Leicester's approach to learning and teaching.

  • Rajinder Bhuhi

    Rajinder Bhuhi is a business leader with a wealth of experience leading and managing the delivery of innovation growth programmes (activities and engagement events), employability (skills development and industrial placements)and entrepreneurial and incubation support...

  • New antimicrobial resistance (AMR) strategies

    Microbes are constantly adapting to their environment, including adapting to survive against current antimicrobial treatment. Strategies include efflux pumps, horizontal gene transfer, bacteriophage and mutation.

  • Human intelligence just got less mysterious, according to Leicester University’s neuroscientists

    Neuroscience experts from the University of Leicester have released research that breaks with the past fifty years of neuroscientific opinion, arguing that the way we store memories is key to making human intelligence superior to that of animals.

Back to top
MENU