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  • Andrew Dunn: Page 192

    Academic Librarian.

  • Comparing Gender and Media Equality across the Globe

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on December 14, 2020 GEM, a research project led by the University of Gothenberg, has culminated in an open-access book: Comparing Gender and Media Across the Globe : A cross-national study of the...

  • Major European grant for research into rare diseases

    Our University has joined an international programme of research to improve the diagnosis of rare diseases.

  • School of Business Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 11

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Lessons learned from Leicester's lockdown

    2000|External engagement Universities do not exist in bubbles. We live in local ecosystems and it is essential for the benefit of the institution and the wider community to develop meaningful partnerships and work collaboratively for the public good.

  • Professor Heiko Balzter shares hopes for COP29 and the path toward global climate action

    Professor Heiko Balzter, Director of the Institute for Environmental Futures, speaks as he attends COP29 on behalf of the University of Leicester

  • Italian Post-beginners (Level 2)

    Italian course for post-beginners at Leicester University

  • carolyntarrant

    Senior lecturer in SAPPHIRE, Department of Health Sciences. Social scientist and qualitative researcher. Interested in ethnography, evaluation, patient safety, quality improvement, acure care, healthcare associated infections. twitter: @pollyandrosie

  • 38m super lightweight mirror chosen for ChineseFrench space mission

    The University has announced the signature of a contract to develop an innovative new type of X-ray mirror for a telescope to be flown on an orbiting observatory to be launched in 2021.

  • Animals’ ‘sixth sense’ more widespread than previously thought

    A study using fruit flies, led by researchers at The Universities of Leicester and Manchester, suggests the animal world’s ability to sense a magnetic field may be more widespread than previously thought.

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