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  • Sanctuary-background staff and fellows

    In the news Ukrainian mum finds sanctuary and a career lifeline at the University of Leicester.

  • Other publications

    Find more information on the 'other' items published by University of Leicester Archaeological Services.

  • Interview with Sharon Wang

    Interview with Dr. Sharon (Shuihua) Wang, the new Mathematics Postdoctoral Research Associate for the Arch-I-Scan project.

  • Call For Papers: Museological Review Issue 27

    A Call for Papers for the 27th issue of the Museological Review journal, which will look at museums as spaces of rootedness and response-ability.

  • Observing Jupiter’s auroras with Hubble

    Posted by Jonathan Nichols in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on June 30, 2016   Unfortunately, they don’t let you take observing trips to the Hubble Space Telescope; perhaps the only downside to using the veteran observatory.

  • BLOG: what’s the wider story behind Leicester’s migration history?

    Fifty years ago Leicester welcomed up to 28,000 South Asian UK passport holders from Uganda.

  • History and Politics BA

    Leicester’s History and Politics course will help you to develop an advanced understanding of the modern world, whilst practical modules will develop your career skills.

  • Indigeneity and Carcerality: Thinking about reserves, prisons, and settler colonialism

    Posted by abarker in Carceral Archipelago on October 27, 2016 In 1871, a group of men – hereditary chiefs of the Six Nations of the Grand River – met with anthropologist Horatio Hale in the town of Brantford, Ontario.

  • 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...

  • UK scientists generate electricity from rare element to power future space missions

    Experts have generated electricity from a rare chemical element for the first time which may mean future space missions can be powered for up to 400 years.

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