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  • Professor Henrietta O'Connor appointed Pro-Vice-Chancellor and Head of College

    The University of Leicester is delighted to announce that Professor Henrietta O'Connor has been appointed to the role leading the College of Social Sciences, Arts and Humanities.

  • Assessment centres

    Discover more about assessment centres, the ways in how you may be assessed and how to best prepare for the day.

  • The Management and Shaping of Innovation

    Module code: MK3133 The world of innovation is fundamentally shifting - what worked for companies in the past no longer guarantees success today.

  • Venue

    Venue page for CEHS 2025 conference

  • Make mine a decaf study increases knowledge of nanoparticle growth

    A team of researchers from Leicester's Department of Physics and Astronomy and France’s G2ELab-CNRS in Grenoble have for the first time observed the growth of free nanoparticles in helium gas in a process similar to the decaffeination of coffee, providing new...

  • Poverty in the UK

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on December 1, 2014 The latest Joseph Rowntree Foundation annual monitoring report – 20% of working age adults without children are in poverty.

  • “In the past we would just be invisible”

    "In the past we would just be invisible" explored attitudes towards heritage and the past of disabled people who live around Colchester.

  • Professor Sir Hans Kornberg

    Hans Kornberg with colleagues in 1974. L-R: Geoff Turnock, Arthur Rowe, unknown, David Critchley, Hans Kornberg, Ron Cooper, unknown, Colin Jones, Peter Henderson(possibly), Ken Jones (photo: Chris Willmott) The Biochemistry Department in 1974.

  • Unlocking the past from conflict to reform in the Northern Ireland Prison Service

    An experienced prison governor and head of the Northern Ireland Prison Service is to speak on prison reform for the University of Leicester’s Scarman Lecture Series.

  • Reproduction and gene shuffling in malaria parasites: how does it work?

    Scientists from the Universities of Leicester and Nottingham have received nearly £600,000 to research how sexual development and gene shuffling within the malaria parasite could help to control malaria transmission.

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