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  • Behavioural Economics

    Module code: EC3089 This modules deals with a branch of economics that stems from cognitive psychology that aims to try and understand the actual behaviours that underlie an individual's decisions.

  • Games and Gamification

    Module code: CO1112 This module will teach Java programming for games through a series of practical workshops and GIS. It will also reflect critically on ‘serious’ gaming through a lecture and seminar series.

  • Managing Translation Project

    Module code: TS3005 In this module, seminars and workshops will be conducted to discuss and reflect on the steps of managing a translation project.

  • Resources

    Access to higher education resources for population genetics, with descriptions and links, supplied by The University of Leicester.

  • Expert opinions cover the Olympic Games and NATO

    Dr Tara McCormack from the Department of Politics and International Relations has written an article for Spiked Online about the UK's involvement in NATO.

  • Seminar archive

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

  • History PGCE

    History is one of the oldest subjects in the school curriculum and has undergone something of a transformation in recent decades. We are committed to History being taught as a lively, thought-provoking subject.

  • Leicester experts to feature at national Festival of Social Science

    University of Leicester researchers will showcase the real-world impact of their work at the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)’s Festival of Social Science in November.

  • Academic and emeritus staff

    See the academic team working within Genetics and Genome Biology at Leicester. Discover staff profiles and their contact details.

  • 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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