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23706 results for: ‘Department of The History of Art and Film’

  • Researcher suggests mainstream media is responsible for shallow coverage of antirape activism

    Dr Kaitlynn Mendes (pictured) from the Department of Media and Communication has argued in a new book that the mainstream media often neglects anti-rape activism by delivering ‘shallow’ coverage.

  • Postgraduate

    Postgraduates in Molecular and Cell Biology at the University of Leicester have full access research equipment and facilities within the Department and contribute to a significant part of the research output.

  • 2017 events

    Browse the events we held in the Centre for Translation and Interpreting Studies between October and December 2017.

  • Pterosaurs needed feet on the ground to become giants

    University of Leicester study determines when and how pterosaurs went from tiny tree-climbers to towering terrestrial titans

  • Colin Hyde

    Colin Hyde manages the East Midlands Oral History Archive, based in Special Collections.

  • Facilities

    The Centre for Urban History is relocating to the Attenborough Tower on the main University campus. Please check back for updates.

  • Code Worker Commodification and the Productivity Paradox: Views on Artificial Intelligence in the wo

    Posted by hconnolly in School of Business Blog on September 17, 2019 Dr Phoebe V Moore was invited to speak on a panel organised by the German Commission for Occupational Health and Safety and Standardization (KAN) at the Human Computer Interaction conference 26 – 31 July 2019.

  • Academic discusses Martin McGuinness in a BBC Radio Leicester interview

    Dr Richard Butler, from the University of Leicester’s School of History, Politics and International Relations, has discussed the life of Martin McGuinness, who passed away today at the age of 66, in an interview with BBC Radio Leicester.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 214

    Academic Librarian.

  • Findings of global study could aid stroke patient prognosis

    Measuring the brain’s ability to control its own blood flow using a bedside test could allow clinicians to give stroke patients and their families a clearer idea of how well they’ll go on to recover.

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