Search

7434 results for: ‘kangle虚拟主机空间销售网站源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.ZvzWNYNtNGLz’

  • Film footage offers unique insight into Richard III burial site dig

    The University has released a unique insight into the archaeological dig that has captured the imagination of the world, with new film footage of a second excavation at the site where the remains of King Richard III were discovered in 2012.

  • Appeals against decisions of a Fitness to Practise panel

    This procedure is allied to Senate Regulation 11 – regulations governing student discipline. All general and procedural rules set out within Senate Regulation 11 apply to this procedure.

  • Publications

    The publications released by The Centre of Landscape and Climate Research for academic purposes.

  • Senate regulation 10: Regulations governing academic appeals (for Boards of Examiners until 31 October 2024)

    Read Senate regulation 10: Regulations governing academic appeals (for Boards of Examiners until 31 October 2024).

  • Emeritus professor discusses experience of post-operative delirium following major heart surgery

    Emeritus Professor of Clinical Psychology Michael Wang from the Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour has been interviewed by Imperial College London about experiencing post-operative delirium after major heart surgery in 2012.

  • Targeting toxins

    In 2015, a team from our Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation used X-ray crystallography to determine the molecular structure of pneumolysin.

  • Heart Surgery Priority Setting Partnership

    The Heart Surgery Priority Setting Partnership is a collaboration between the Department of Cardiovascular Sciences at the University of Leicester and the James Lind Alliance.

  • Deprivation is ‘driving’ Covid-19 ethnic disparities, claims new analysis

    Deprivation is ‘driving’ Covid-19 disparities among minority ethnic groups and could be considered the main cause of disproportionate infection rates, hospitalisation and deaths.

  • Unprecedented energy consumption is leaving a permanent stain on planetary history

    A new study co-authored by three professors at the University of Leicester’s School of Geography, Geology and the Environment argues that the speed and scale of human energy consumption has pushed the Earth towards a new geological epoch, the ‘Anthropocene’.

  • Esther Moss

    The academic profile of Dr Esther Moss, Associate Professor of Gynaecological Oncology at University of Leicester

Back to top
MENU