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14336 results for: ‘museum studies’

  • David Smith

    The academic profile of Dr David Smith, Lecturer in Media and Communication at University of Leicester

  • Gender, Race and War

    Module code: PL3145 How does war come to be thought of as virtuous, just or humanitarian? The post-Cold War era has been defined by a renaissance in war.

  • Gender, Race and War

    Module code: PL3145 How does war come to be thought of as virtuous, just or humanitarian? The post-Cold War era has been defined by a renaissance in war.

  • Gender, Race and War

    Module code: PL3145 How does war come to be thought of as virtuous, just or humanitarian? The post-Cold War era has been defined by a renaissance in war.

  • Human Rights and Global Ethics MA

    The gap between the promise and reality of universal human rights is worrying. Strides are being taken, but there’s still much to do. This Masters in human rights and global ethics addresses this challenge on both a conceptual and practical level.

  • PhD Students

    Contact members of History at Leicester's academic staff. Browse staff profiles and find out how to contact our team via telephone or email.

  • A passion for researching public policy and management – University of Leicester

    One researcher's account of what inspired her passion for public policy research, and how she uses linguistic theory to investigate and address the complexity of public policy narratives and the effect their implementation has on people's day-to-day lives.

  • Santander scholar on path to career in STEM

    An engineer at the University of Leicester has become one of the first beneficiaries of a scheme designed to enhance opportunities for women in STEM.

  • PhD opportunities

    Chemistry at the University of Leicester hosts a number of studentship schemes, providing funding for students, typically for a September start date. Find out more about our current studentship opportunities.

  • In my prison notebook

    Posted by Carrie Crockett in Carceral Archipelago on August 29, 2016 Last year I came across a rare archival find: multiple editions of a 19th century prison newspaper covertly produced by Russian inmates between 1890 and 1905.

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