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7022 results for: ‘电脑端和手机端自适应的精品网址导航页面清新简洁源码修改灵活✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.ubuQZcFHNNij’

  • Research impact

    Learn more about the impact of our research into Geriatric Emergency Medicine locally, nationally and internationally.

  • The Clink restaurant at HMP Brixton: fine dining and prison education

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on July 21, 2014 By Sarah Longair, Carceral Archipelago Project Researcher.

  • Modern Languages BA

    Leicester’s Modern Language Studies degree allows you to study up to three languages, from French, Italian, and Spanish.

  • Sociology BA

    Leicester is one of the best cities to study Sociology. On this degree you’ll gain a thorough grounding in research methods and theory, across a wide range of modules.

  • 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.

  • Teaching staff

    List of staff in teaching roles

  • Case study - Perry Draycott

    Hear from Perry Draycott, an ex Armed Forces member, who joined the Operating Department Practitioner at Leicester through the Armed Forces in Allied Health programme at Leicester.

  • Project sheds new light on thousands of years of Charnwood Forests history

    Leicestershire Victoria County History (VCH) Trust and our University are staging a free and fun heritage festival for the whole family at the picturesque Beaumanor Hall in Woodhouse, Leicestershire on Sunday 21 May to celebrate the history of Charnwood Forest.

  • Industry and academia partners to join European research initiative to fight Alzheimers dementia

    An alliance of academia and industry, including the University of Leicester, has announced the start of a novel collaboration, the European Prevention of Alzheimer’s dementia (EPAD) Initiative, to test innovative treatments for the prevention of Alzheimer’s dementia.

  • 25 years ago Professor Sir Alec Jeffreys solved the mystery of what happened to notorious Nazi war criminal

    25 years ago yesterday (18 November, 1990), the Leicester Mercury ran an article about genetic fingerprinting pioneer Professor Sir Alec Jeffreys, covering his sensational breakthrough to help identify the Auschwitz 'Angel of Death'.

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