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  • Publications

    Browse the publications published by and relating to the research undertaken by the Hopkinson Group in the School of Chemistry.

  • Competing on the centre right: An examination of party strategy in Britain

    This research project provided a detailed analysis of the ideology, policies and strategy of the Conservative Party and UKIP at the 2009 European Parliament and the next general election.

  • Researcher wins Newton Fund Grant for Disasters and Development Research Network

    A new project led by Dr Jonathan Corpus Ong from the Department of Media and Communication seeks to explore how media and communication technologies can be used during disasters as well as promote social welfare in the developing world.

  • New report shows deaths during childbirth reduce by half

    In their latest report, co-authored by a researcher from our Department of Health Sciences, a team of academics, clinicians and charity representatives, called MBRRACE-UK*, has looked at the quality of care for stillbirths and neonatal deaths of babies born at term who...

  • Influential artist Jenny Holzer on display at Attenborough Arts Centre through ARTIST ROOMS

    ARTIST ROOMS Jenny Holzer 14 June – 29 September 2024 Free Entry Attenborough Arts Centre brings a new exhibition to Leicester, in partnership with Tate & National Galleries of Scotland: ARTIST ROOMS Jenny Holzer.

  • abarker

    Adam Barker is a Research Associate with the Carceral Archipelago Project, University of Leicester.

  • Birth of Giants, University of Leicester

    Juno's exploration of the interior of Jupiter via gravitational mapping.

  • The passport: is it the only way to say who we truly are?

    Read the article "The passport: is it the only way to say who we truly are?" This is part of the Social Worlds project at the University of Leicester.

  • Baby pterodactyls could fly from birth

    A breakthrough discovery has found that pterodactyls, extinct flying reptiles also known as pterosaurs, had a remarkable ability – they could fly from birth.

  • Unprecedented energy consumption is leaving a permanent stain on planetary history

    A new study co-authored by three professors at the University of Leicester’s School of Geography, Geology and the Environment argues that the speed and scale of human energy consumption has pushed the Earth towards a new geological epoch, the ‘Anthropocene’.

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