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9485 results for: ‘Pear-在线奖状生成器单页源码附接口✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.HCHMMUSgeiH’

  • 2021

    Here the list of publications of 2021 can be found.

  • 2022 news

    July 2022 Refining Rabbit Handling An animal technician from Leicester has been working to refine the handling of rabbits, and was featured in issue 15 of NC3R’s Newsletter Tech3Rs.

  • Academic Freedoms and the University Ltd.

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on April 9, 2014 Voltaire once wrote “To learn who rules over you, simply find out who you are not allowed to criticize”. Professor of Organisation and Culture Martin Parker recently found out precisely what he meant.

  • Robin Clarke: Page 2

    Rob is the Learning Development Manager in the School of Museum Studies at the University of Leicester.

  • Using Theory in Improvement Research – University of Leicester

    This SAPPHIRE blog argues that far from being overly complex and irrelevant, theory has a practical role to play in healthcare improvement. We all need to work to make theory more accessible for the front-line practitioners doing improvement work.

  • Penny Bloods on display in the Library

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on May 9, 2014 Penny Bloods, popular from the 1840s to the 1860s, were so named because of their preoccupation with the gory and sensational.

  • Mapping the Sounds of Leicestershire & Rutland

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library Special Collections on October 26, 2020 In the summer of 2020, three Museum Studies students at the University of Leicester (Elizabeth Gray, Lillian Namyaalo and Maria Georgiadou) joined the Unlocking Our Sound Heritage team to create a sound...

  • PhD students

    Browse our current PhD students in the School of Computing and Mathematical Sciences, and see their contact details.

  • Issues around interviewing

    Discover the issues that may surround interviewing, such as: bias, rapport, reciprocation, cultural considerations and interpreters.

  • New hope for patients with aggressive asbestos-linked cancer as trial shows a targeted cancer treatment can improve survival

    Leicester researchers have shown for the first time that a drug that prevents cancer cells from repairing can control the growth of mesothelioma, a rare and aggressive form of cancer caused by asbestos

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