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23977 results for: ‘students announcements international women2019s day review’

  • Equipment for oral history projects

    Get more information on the equipment you may need in order to conduct interviews, including cassette recorders, CD recorders, microphones and sound editing.

  • 2020

    Here the list of publications of 2020 can be found.

  • Black Lesbian and Gay Centre Digital resources 

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 17, 2023 Free access via the Bishopsgate Institute to newsletters and publications from this London-based support group.

  • Study finds significant variation in stillbirths and neonatal mortality across the UK

    Research published today shows the wide regional variation in the incidence of stillbirth and neonatal deaths in the UK. The MBRRACE-UK report focuses on rates of stillbirth and neonatal death across the UK. MBRRACE-UK focuses on babies born at 24 weeks of gestation or more.

  • The UK’s humanitarian aid cuts

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on June 21, 2021 There have been proposed cuts to the UK aid budget. For some background and reactions to the proposed cuts see these useful resources: The 0.

  • Carceral Archipelago: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 7

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Survival Models

    Module code: MA7414 This module will give a comprehensive grounding in the fundamental notation and processes in studying human mortality data in an actuarial context.

  • Survival Models

    Module code: MA7414 This module will give a comprehensive grounding in the fundamental notation and processes in studying human mortality data in an actuarial context.

  • Survival Models

    Module code: MA7414 This module will give a comprehensive grounding in the fundamental notation and processes in studying human mortality data in an actuarial context.

  • Genetics and genealogy

    More about the genealogical detective work involved in identifying King Richard III. Mitochondrial DNA and the Y-chromosome were used, after all these years, for the DNA identification purposes.

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