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  • Engaging Visitors and Audiences

    Module code: MU7507 Module Outline This module is concerned with how museums impact audiences in a variety of ways, and how they contribute to learning.

  • Affective Digital Histories: An AHRC-funded research project

    Learn more about the Centre for New Writing's eight commissioned pieces exploring the afterlife of industrial buildings in Leicester and Glossop, as well as relationships between people who might have used them.

  • Lines of descent

    DNA analysis of the Greyfriars bones was crucial to confirming their identity as those of Richard III. But that analysis would be meaningless without something for comparison.

  • Training links

    The East Midlands Oral History Archive have put together a number of links from around the web, which can provide extra training on recording and other aspects of oral history.

  • Current PhD Students

    Find out more about our PhD students research within Politics and International Relations at Leicester.

  • Annabelle Sreberny

    The University has learned, with sadness, of the death of Professor Annabelle Sreberny, former Director of the Centre for Mass Communication Research. Annabelle Sreberny was born on 5 September 1949 to parents who had come to Britain as Jewish refugees.

  • Travel

    Webpage describing Travel possibilities for reaching Leicester for the Hydrogenase conference in 2026

  • Undergraduate

    Geology at the University of Leicester is specially tailored to provide you with a broad understanding of the fundamental concepts in geology. Our accredited degrees allow you to focus on the areas of Applied and Environmental Geology, Geophysics or Palaeontology.

  • Sarah Gabbott

    The academic profile of Professor Sarah Gabbott, Professor of Palaeontology at University of Leicester

  • Genomic sequencing confirms breast cancer link between Leicester sisters

    Two Leicester sisters who had their entire genomes sequenced in the hope of finding answers to their family history of breast cancer have learnt they both carry a genetic variant that significantly increases their risk of developing the disease.

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