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7264 results for: ‘2021最火熊猫视频主题模板✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.iRIagUMAbp’

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 156

    Academic Librarian.

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 54

    Academic Librarian.

  • Rest in Pieces: The story of a hanged woman and her journey to becoming a museum object. By Ali Well

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on July 27, 2016   When referring to “skeletons in the cupboard” we rarely expect these to be literally true, but in the case of Mary Ann Higgins and the Herbert Art Gallery & Museum in Coventry, it is.

  • Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Lei

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 42

    Academic Librarian.

  • Is there a Little Space in your Company?

    Posted by hconnolly in School of Business Blog on February 15, 2019 In this blog, Dr Stephen Wright, Business Development Manager at the East Midlands Centre of Excellence in Satellite Applications at the University of Leicester, discusses the SPRINT programme which...

  • A Price worth Paying? Short Term Economic Recovery and the Loss of a Generation

    Posted by Melanie Simms in School of Business Blog on February 5, 2014 Melanie Simms, Professor of Work and Employment at the School, highlights the under-reported blind-spot in the over-reported fact of an emergent economic recovery: today’s youth are unlikely to be...

  • Steve Rooney: Page 2

    Learning Development Manager

  • The Criminal Corpse and the Competing Claims of Justice and Anatomy. By Richard Ward

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on December 21, 2015 The later eighteenth century represents a particular moment when the competing claims of anatomy and criminal justice fought for supremacy over the criminal corpse.

  • Unrequited Love: The Enduring Pain of Convictism in Western Australia

    Posted by abarker in Carceral Archipelago on May 22, 2017 By Kellie Moss The sentence of transportation signified the physical removal, or banishment of convicts, from the wider social body to colonies overseas.

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