Search

7860 results for: ‘Primary Education’

  • MA Museum Studies Placement in Special Collections, Weeks 1-2

    Posted by Sarah Wood in Library Special Collections on July 23, 2018 Guest post from Yineng Zhu, Andrew Permain and Joe Searle, MA Museum Studies students working with the Archives & Special Collections team.

  • Support for students with ADHD

    Support for students with ADHD at University of Leicester

  • Oral history projects in Northamptonshire

    Browse projects and oral history materials from Northamptonshire, including Black History project, which was a project aiming to record and promote stories of the Northamptonshire's black communities over the past 500 years.

  • 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.

  • Town Commemorates Convicts, by Minako Sakata

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in Carceral Archipelago on September 29, 2014 At the end of August, I visited Tsukigata, a small town in Hokkaido where the Kabato Central Prison was located from 1881 to 1919.

  • Richard III and the legacy of his re-discovery

    Mathew Morris (pictured), Site Director for the Grey Friars Project, University of Leicester Archaeological Services (ULAS), has written an article for the British Academy reflecting on his time working on the discovery of Richard III.

  • News archive 2020

    Read news stories from Leicester Law School in 2020.

  • A Historical Long View of Posthumous Harm: Comparing organ snatching to body-snatching. By Floris To

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on May 16, 2016   Improper Procurement and Retention   Taking organs of dead children without parental permission at Alder Hey is a practice The Economist (2001) dubbed the ‘return of the body-snatchers’.

  • Injuries

    After excavation, the bones were carefully cleaned with water and soft brushes. This revealed more significant injuries on the skeleton, to add to those visible when the remains were first uncovered.

  • Expert opinions cover enabling characteristics of cancer Euroscepticism in Poland and Leicester Citys miracle win

    PhD student Mohan Harihar from the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology has written an article for Think: Leicester discussing the properties that help make it easier for cells to acquire the ‘hallmarks of cancer’ that promote tumour development.

Back to top
MENU