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  • A century of human genetics

    Read through a lecture delivered by Sir Alec Jeffreys at the Leicester Medical Society Bicentenary.

  • Remembering Exile and Transportation: some thoughts from Cape Town

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on November 2, 2014   Before I began T he Carceral Archipelago project , my research was loosely centred on the history of Indian Ocean penal settlements and colonies, from the late nineteenth century to the Second World War.

  • Convicts, Collecting and Knowledge Production in the Nineteenth Century

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on July 27, 2015 In previous blogs, I have explored some of the circulations and connections that linked nations, colonies and empires, and wove together practices of punishment and penal labour across polities and imperial spaces.

  • The Belmont House Society and the Founding of the University

    The contribution of the Belmont House Society to the founding of the University of Leicester

  • Looking at War Memorials

    Posted by Elizabeth Blood in Library Special Collections on May 7, 2020   In October-November 2019, Archives & Special Collections featured an exhibition in the cases outside our reading room, entitled Looking at War Memorials .

  • This is England, or did I inadvertently predict Brexit?

    Posted by Richard Courtney in School of Business Blog on March 3, 2017 Richard Courtney reflects on the decade since his PhD, and in the light of Brexit and Trump, asks whether the social sciences have forgotten the white English working class.

  • reproducibility and coding style

    discuss of the way that reproducibility and coding style are taught on my introductory short course om data analysis with R and the tidyverse

  • Academic encounters? International Relations Studies and the “Carceral Archipelago” project

    Posted by Christian De Vito in Carceral Archipelago on March 2, 2017 My recent appointment as lecturer at the History Department of the Utrecht University has brought me in close contact with the bourgeoning field of International Relations (IR) studies.

  • How much do you know about the founders and early benefactors of our University? by Caroline Wessel

    Posted by Simon Dixon in Library Special Collections on November 1, 2019 To celebrate our Centenary Years, Special Collections would like to share with you new research, which not only paints a picture of the how we were founded, but also the way of life and the connection of...

  • Thinking sociologically about the history of convicts and penal colonies

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on February 25, 2016 In the early 1990s I had the privilege of studying with David Garland, then teaching and researching in Edinburgh University’s Law School.

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