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  • 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.

  • Emma Battell Lowman

    Dr Emma Battell Lowman is the co-author of Settler: Identity and Colonialism in 21st Century Canada (with geographer Adam J. Barker) and is a Managing Editor of Settler Colonial Studies. Dr.

  • The politics of comparison: writing a global history of punishment

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on February 5, 2015 The Carceral Archipelago project faces enormous challenges in writing the history of punishment as global history.

  • “Of Ainu Women and Russian Prisoners: Listening for the Voice of the Other” University of Leicester

    Sakhalin, Bronislaw Pilsudski, political exile, Chufsamma, Ainu, indigenous tribes, prisoners, Ket, Fridtjof Nansen, Russian colonization, University of Leicester

  • Carceral Archipelago: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 8

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Highlights for the School of Molecular and Cell Biology’s research in REF2021

    School of Molecular and Cell Biology’s research highlights in the 2021 Research Excellence Framework.

  • The Two Fredericks: A snapshot of male intimacy in prison

    Posted by Katy Roscoe in Carceral Archipelago on September 30, 2016 In the 1840s, campaigners for the abolition of convict transportation engaged in a campaign of scare-mongering about the prevalence of sexual acts between male convicts (dubbed “unnatural acts”).

  • Dr Claire Smith

    Find out more about Dr Claire Smith, alumna of the University of Leicester Department of Infection, Immunity and Inflammation. She is Lecturer in Child Health at University College London.

  • Take a visual tour of womens influence throughout University history

    From the first female students in 1921, to the first black female president of the Students’ Union in 1975, to the present day, women have played a vital role in our University's history, an exhibition currently being held at the Library reveals.

  • Women will take 118 years to achieve equality

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 20, 2015 A ccording to the World Economic Forum Global Gender report which ranks over 140 economies on health, economic, political and education factors.

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