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  • Thick Translation of Chin Ping Mei by David Roy: Type, Function and Features

    Find out more about our event: Thick Translation of Chin Ping Mei by David Roy: Type, Function and Features, with speaker Professor Xiuying Wen.

  • ‘Closing the Gender Pay gap would take 95 years’

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on February 24, 2017 Across OECD nations at current rates of progress according to the latest PWC Women in work report.

  • Research to understand peatland policy ‘on the ground’

    Postgraduate research at the University of Leicester is seeking to understand how peatland policy is implemented at a local level, gaining insights from NGOs, farmers, landowners, researchers, and policymakers

  • One in three people with Type 2 diabetes fail to take their medication research shows

    More than one in three people with Type 2 diabetes fail to take their medication, according to a new study by researchers from the Leicester Diabetes Centre.

  • New portrait of Sir David Attenborough revealed in city

    A stunning new portrait of Leicester honorary graduate and Distinguished Honorary Fellow Sir David Attenborough at Leicester’s New Walk Museum has been revealed by the man himself.

  • Contemporary Environments

    Research in Contemporary Environments considers fundamental and applied aspects of environmental processes and human impacts on the environment.

  • Avoid

    The first step to reducing our negative impact on the environment is to reduce our greenhouse gas emissions from the outset.

  • Sharp eyes to the skies

    How satellites are helping tackle climate change

  • Seeds from Hiroshima atomic bomb survivor tree take root in Leicester

    Seeds from trees which survived the atomic bomb in Hiroshima have taken root in Leicester in time for the 80th anniversary of VJ Day.

  • Stop the clocks: Brisk walking may slow biological ageing process, study shows

    A new study of genetic data published today (Wednesday) of more than 400,000 UK adults has revealed a clear link between walking pace and a genetic marker of biological age.

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