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10754 results for: ‘简约Ultra博客主题源码 | EmlogPro主题模板✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.BkRNIzTQUgRQtfe’

  • A Snapshot of Collaborative Work in History

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on September 9, 2016 During my PhD study and for the first ten years of my academic career, I researched alone.

  • NIHR Research Support Service Hub

    Find out more about the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Research Support Service (RSS) at the University of Leicester.

  • Library and Learning Services: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 2

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Veronica Heney

    Communications Assistant to the SAPPHIRE Group

  • Upriver to Mazaruni Prison (Guyana)

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on April 4, 2017   One of the wonderful things about ‘blue skies’ research is the element of surprise that it can throw up.

  • Equal Pay Day

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 11, 2016 This year equal pay day was 10 th November  This highlights the gender gap in wages as it is calculated by researchers to represent the last day in which women earn the same as men.

  • Angus Cameron

    Senior Lecturer and Deputy Head of School. He blogs at xenotopia.wordpress.com and tweets as @Tausendkunstler.

  • Research skills training in May and June

    Research skills training being run in May and June 2025 at the University for Leicester for research students and research staff.

  • Fragile Earth – our student exhibition 2013

    Posted by Amy Jane Barnes in School of Museum Studies Blog on April 9, 2013 Every year, our campus-based Museum Studies and Art Museum and Gallery Studies students take part in a Design Exercise as part of their Module 3 studies, the last taught component of their masters’...

  • Incunabula in Special Collections

    Posted by Simon Dixon in Library Special Collections on April 10, 2014 For a University the size and age of Leicester the Library has a surprising rich collection of incunabula (books printed before 1501).

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