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  • The Ripple: An Archival Retrospective

    Posted by Sarah Wood in Library and Learning Services on August 8, 2025 Guest post written by Carter Buckingham who has been volunteering in Special Collections since August 2024.

  • Supporting student learning in 2020-21: avoiding a common misstep

    Posted by Steve Rooney in Leicester Learning Institute: Enhancing learning and teaching on June 4, 2020 One if the many important questions to have arisen during the current pandemic, is how we can effectively induct and orient students into new ways and, indeed, new modes of...

  • PhD students

    Learn more about Leicester Law School's current research students and their PhD projects.

  • Oral history projects in Nottinghamshire

    Browse projects and oral history materials from Nottinghamshire, including the Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender history project, which is now part of the Rainbow Heritage website.

  • Senate regulation 9: Regulations governing Research Degree Programmes: Thesis format and submission (9.166-9.197)

    Thesis submission 9.

  • Seminar archive

    Find out more about the upcoming seminars held by m:iv Leicester.

  • Looking at War Memorials

    Posted by Elizabeth Blood in Library Special Collections on May 7, 2020   In October-November 2019, Archives & Special Collections featured an exhibition in the cases outside our reading room, entitled Looking at War Memorials .

  • SAPPHIRE Spotlight: Emmilie Aveling

    An interview with Dr EL Aveling about her work on the Surgical Safety Checklist, comparing health interventions in different global contexts, and what her background in non-governmental and social welfare organisations showed her about the importance of healthcare research.

  • Student feedback and complaints procedure

    We welcome feedback from our students, and we understand that occasionally you may wish to make a complaint. Find out about our student feedback and complaints procedure, and see details of who to contact.

  • Ethnic minority and poorer children more likely to die in intensive care

    Children from ethnic minority backgrounds and those living in areas with higher levels of child poverty are more likely to die in intensive care than White children and those from the least deprived areas, new study by University of Leicester researchers shows

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