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  • Impact of Chinese students in Leicester is focus of TV programme

    Dr Giovanna Puppin, Lecturer in Advertising and International Promotional Cultures in the School of Media, Communication and Sociology, recently featured on BBC Sunday Politics East Midlands, as she talked about the importance...

  • Leicester lecturer turns spotlight on British country houses Caribbean and East Indian connections

    On 22 October, starting at 6.

  • RefugEAP Programme

    Access free online academic English programme RefugEAP for refugees in the UK developed by University of Leicester and University of Leeds and taught by volunteer EAP tutors

  • Academic provides national security briefing

    Dr Andrew Futter from the School of History, Politics and International Relations was recently invited to London to brief the UK National Security Secretariat at the Cabinet Office.

  • Minutes

    Find minutes for Council meetings from the 2012-13 academic year through to the present, as well as contact details for requesting minutes for meetings which took place in earlier years.

  • PhD in Creative Writing

    Pursuing a PhD in Creative Writing at the University Leicester means becoming part of an exciting and dynamic research and creative environment. Find out more about our PhD programme.

  • Toxic formaldehyde’s dual nature to be probed with new chemical tool

    University of Leicester chemistry researchers have developed new compounds to better study formaldehyde

  • GHOST in the sky captures Greenhouse Gases

    An instrument co-designed by University of Leicester scientists has been used in aircraft flights over the UK to monitor greenhouse gases.

  • Reaching for the stars

    A PhD student at our University has been recognised internationally for her research into life on Mars. Berivan Esen is amongst the 30 women around the world who have been awarded the prestigious Zonta International Amelia Earhart Fellowship for 2018-19.

  • Pick your poison study examines the use of plant poison on prehistoric weaponry

    Archaeologists have long believed that our ancestors used poisons extracted from plants such as foxgloves and hemlock to make their weapons more lethal and kill their prey more swiftly.

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