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  • Looking through the Record Office boxes

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library Special Collections on February 10, 2020 Ewan digitising the tapes. One of the features of the Unlocking Our Sound Heritage project is that we want to create the opportunity for volunteers to learn new skills.

  • On multi-sited research and mono-sited (nationalist) memory

    Posted by Christian De Vito in Carceral Archipelago on May 26, 2015 Addressing convict transportation – the key feature in the Carceral Archipelago project – implies multi-sited research, that is, research in archives located in different places (and countries/continents).

  • Conceptualising Islands in History: Considering Bermuda and Gibraltar’s Prison Hulks

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on March 8, 2016 By Anna McKay, AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Partnership Student, National Maritime Museum & University of Leicester.

  • The Knowledge ‘versus’ Skills Debate, Part 2: What about ‘transferable skills’?

    Posted by Steve Rooney in Leicester Learning Institute: Enhancing learning and teaching on May 24, 2018 In the first part of this post, I discussed the need to develop more broad and inclusive understandings of knowledge and to move away from unhelpfully simplistic and...

  • Arguing against learning outcomes as a behaviourist learning approach – University of Leicester

    The 'Learning Outcomes Project' at the University of Leicester. Arguing against learning outcomes as a behaviourist learning approach.

  • 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.

  • Ice Giant Systems as the Next Step in our Exploration of the Solar System

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 9 November 2020 Dr. Leigh N. Fletcher introduces a special issue of Phil. Trans.

  • Obituary: Sir Michael Atiyah

    Sir Michael Atiyah, who was widely regarded as Britain’s greatest mathematician, has died aged 89. Sir Michael was Chancellor of the University of Leicester between 1995 and 2005.

  • Researchers call for armchair astronomers to help find unknown hidden worlds

    Astronomers have launched a new online initiative, calling for volunteers to come forward and help to search for planets beyond our Solar System.

  • Professor Richard Ambrosi appointed new Space Park Leicester Executive Director

    Space Park Leicester is delighted to announce the appointment of Professor Richard Ambrosi as its new Executive Director.

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