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24303 results for: ‘offices press think leicester arts and culture 2016 is peter tatchell good for you’

  • Greek and Roman Art: Ancient and modern contexts

    Module code: AH3062 In this module we will investigate past approaches to art from the Greek and Roman world and explore how our understandings of classical art have developed. We will pay particular attention to the physical and social contexts of this art (e.g.

  • The closed prison and the memory of anywhere-but-here

    Posted by Christian De Vito in Carceral Archipelago on March 21, 2016 The prison of the wolvenplein (Wolves Square), located in the city centre of Utrecht (The Netherlands), closed down in June 2014 as part of the budget cuts that have also affected the prison administration.

  • Behind the Scenes at the 21st Century Museum – a look back…

    Posted by Robin Clarke in School of Museum Studies Blog on July 28, 2015 The Museum of Liverpool © Ben Kirkpatrick Last time I posted, we had just opened up registration for our Massive Open Online Course (or ‘MOOC’).

  • Leicester doctor receives Royal College 500-Year celebratory award

    Research to improve the outcomes for patients suffering from a devastating form of stroke called intracerebral haemorrhage has been recognised with a prestigious award from The Royal College of Physicians (RCP) granted to Dr Jatinder Minhas from...

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 123

    Academic Librarian.

  • Leicester expert informs report into NHS and care workforce crisis

    Research from the University of Leicester has informed a high-profile government report on staff recruitment, training and retention rates in health and social care.

  • Power and Difference in the Past

    Module code: AR3089 The past was not like the present. In this module we explore the different worlds of Neolithic and Bronze Age Britain. We explore how power worked, the ways in which identity and personhood operated and how communities came together and broke apart.

  • About Arch-I-Scan

    Discover more about Arch-I-Scan Ceramic finewares are the most essential evidence for investigating the socio-cultural practices of eating and drinking across the Roman world and constitute some of the most extensive archaeological remains.

  • Research shows higher rates of stillbirth and neonatal death for those living in deprived areas, minority ethnic groups and twin pregnancies

    People living in the UK’s most deprived areas, minority ethnic groups and those with twin pregnancies all continue to experience higher rates of stillbirth and neonatal death according to new research from the MBRRACE-UK team at the University of Leicester.

  • Fiendish Friday Quiz #5

    A fifth Evelyn Waugh quiz, taken From the Evelyn Waugh Newsletter Vol. 24 No. 1

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