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844 results for: ‘decolonisation’

  • AboutUs

    Leicester probably started as a Celtic settlement. It was the capital of the local Celtic tribe, the Coriletavi. The Romans invaded Britain in 43 AD and they captured Leicestershire by 47 AD. The Romans built a fort at Leicester in 48 AD.

  • CUH advisory board

    The Centre for Urban History has an Advisory Board, currently consisting of seven members drawn from within and outside academia, who act as a hub for all relevant academia.

  • The forgotten success of penal transportation reform in late Imperial Russia: the lowering of prison

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on June 8, 2016 By Mikhail Nakonechny . The late Imperial Russian prison and exile system is almost unequivocally considered to be the traditional embodiment of brutality, institutional inhumanity and injustice.

  • Our environment over a billion years: travel through time into Leicester’s deep past

    Experts at the University of Leicester host an evening exploring landscape change and biodiversity in the city and county on Thursday 23 March

  • Global COVID-19 study finds higher infection risk was main driver of ethnic inequality

    A major new global study has found that higher rates of severe illness and death among ethnic minority groups during the pandemic was largely driven by a greater risk of infection.

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  • Jim Roberts

    A Life Lived Well: Jim Roberts (1947-2023) Professor Suzanne MacLeod writes: James (Jim) Roberts was born into a working class-family in Liverpool in 1947.

  • Rural life

    Learn more about the collections about rural life in the East Midlands Oral History Archive.

  • Featured projects

    Explore the projects within Media Research at the University of Leicester.

  • People

    Details of the people involved in the Representing gender-based violence: literature, performance and activism in the Anglophone Caribbean research project.

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