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  • About us

    Our vision Our fascination with the natural world drives us to seek deeper understanding of Earth’s unique biosphere, past, present and future.

  • Meet the team

    Meet the team behind the studies into Parent Report of Children's Abilities (PARCA-R) at the University of Leicester.

  • The Madonna of the pinks

    RCMG was commissioned to carry out an evaluation of the impact of Raphael’s Madonna of the Pinks on young people unfamiliar with art galleries.

  • Artworks

    The Engineering Building contains two artworks by the influential 20th century artist Sir Eduardo Paolozzi. Learn more about The Tapestry and The Bronze.

  • Professor Lisa Smith

    Professor Lisa Smith, Professor of Criminology and Director of the Leicester Institute for Advanced Studies works at the interface between forensic science, psychology and the law.

  • Aims and strategies

    We are proud to be one of the world’s leading research-intensive universities, elite in the excellence of our research, yet distinctive for the genuine synergy between our research and teaching.

  • UKRI Open Access Policy: how to comply from 1 April 2022

    new open access policy for UKRI funded research, how to stay compliant with the policy from 1 April 2022 including Rights Retention Statements, article processing charges, using the University's block grant and publishing in eligible transformative journals

  • Exploring explosions in space

    Exploring gamma-ray bursts, the enormous, distant explosions in space.

  • Expedition 347: Paleoenvironmental evolution of the Baltic Sea Basin through the last glacial cycle

    September 2013 – November 2013 The aim of Expedition 347 is to explore the environmental changes in the Baltic Sea over the last 140,000 years and to acquire the most complete possible record of the paleoceanographic and microbiological history preserved within the sediments...

  • Bizarre new fossils shed light on ancient plankton

    Microfossils discovered by University of Leicester scientist date back half a billion years. Resembling modern-day algae, they provide insight into early life in our oceans.

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