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  • Honorary, visiting and Emeritus staff

    Browse the honorary staff associated with Museum Studies at Leicester and find out how to get in touch with them.

  • People

    Meet the Modern Languages at Leicester team. Browse our list of academic and professional services staff and find out how to get in touch via telephone and email.

  • Book Group: Unconditional Surrender

    Posted by Barbara Cooke in Waugh and Words on February 11, 2015 The Penguin edition of Unconditional Surrender In January, a small cohort of the Book Group met to discuss the last book in Waugh’s “Sword of Honour” trilogy: Unconditional Surrender , which appeared for the...

  • The sting of the bling

    Experts Professor Gawen Jenkin and Dr Dan Smith explain the importance of pursuing sustainable methods of metal extraction in order to tackle climate change.

  • SAPPHIRE hosts successful interdisciplinary workshop on antibiotic prescribing

    Posted by ekrockow in SAPPHIRE (Social science APPlied to Healthcare Improvement REsearch) on October 16, 2018 Is antibiotic overuse compromising the efficacy of current drugs? Are we going to run out of effective antibiotics? What interdisciplinary approaches may be useful...

  • Ken Jones

    Kenneth (Ken) Milner Jones was born in Chesham Bois, near Amersham, on 20 March 1930 and was educated at Merchant Taylors’ School, Sandy Lodge, Middlesex.

  • Alex Whitfield: 'Learning in Living Knowledge'

    Museum Studies graduate Alex Whitfield discusses her life and career after graduating from Leicester with a Masters and a PhD.

  • Midlands Innovation partnership’s £5 million commitment to HE technicians

    A new project which could become the blueprint for the career advancement of 30,000 higher education technicians is now officially underway.

  • Study

    Our team at The University of Leicester Centre of Urban History (CUH) conducts cutting edge teaching and research in urban history and related fields.

  • Knowing where to look

    Whilst nothing of the friary remains above ground today, its site has never actually been lost, despite one early map of Leicester, the 1610 Speed map, getting its location wrong.

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