Search
- 
                    Social Class and Inequalitieshttps://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/sy2075 Module code: SY2075 Debates around the Channel 4 programme 'Benefits Street' (2014) highlighted some of the problems with making 'poverty entertainment'. 
- 
                    Being Human: Evolution and Prehistoryhttps://le.ac.uk/modules/2024/ar2555 Module code: AR2555 What does it mean to be human? Why did hominins start walking on two legs? How did hominins respond to major Quaternary climatic fluctuations? Who were the first fire users? Why did people begin to produce art? Who were the... 
- 
                    Local schoolchildren to learn about Richard III discoveryhttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/february/local-schoolchildren-to-learn-about-richard-iii-discovery-at-home-of-dna-fingerprinting For the third year running Leicester schoolchildren will learn the scientific and archaeological skills used to uncover King Richard III at a series of workshop days starting on Monday 23 February 2015. 
- 
                    Unlocking the past from conflict to reform in the Northern Ireland Prison Servicehttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/november/unlocking-the-past-from-conflict-to-reform-in-the-northern-ireland-prison-service An experienced prison governor and head of the Northern Ireland Prison Service is to speak on prison reform for the University of Leicester’s Scarman Lecture Series. 
- 
                    Masai charity mission for Mazinhttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/april/masaai-charity-mission-for-mazin Final year Medical Genetics student Mazin Mirza (pictured) is planning to live amongst the Masaai tribespeople of Kenya and raise money for charity. 
- 
                    ITVs Code of a Killer concludes tonighthttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/april/itv2019s-2018code-of-a-killer2019-concludes-tonight The concluding episode of the two-part ITV fictional drama ‘Code of a Killer’, based on Professor Sir Alec Jeffreys’s discovery of DNA fingerprinting at the University of Leicester and its first use in a murder enquiry, will air tonight (13 April) from 9pm. 
- 
                    Talking points a range of topics tackled by academics 16 Aprilhttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/april/talking-points-a-range-of-topics-tackled-by-academics-this-week Dr Heather Brunskell-Evans from the Centre for Medical Humanities has contributed an article to The Conversation looking into research by NSPCC Childline suggesting that in a poll of nearly 700 12 to 13-year-olds in the UK, one in five had viewed pornographic images... 
- 
                    Earth history opens a new chapterhttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/may/earth-history-opens-a-new-chapter An international group of scientists has proposed that fallout from hundreds of nuclear weapons tests in the late 1940s to early 1960s could be used to mark the dawn of a new geological age in Earth history – the Anthropocene. 
- 
                    How Twitter users can work together to defuse social tensionshttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/march/how-twitter-users-can-work-together-to-defuse-social-tensions A report co-authored by Dr Paul Reilly (pictured) from the Department of Media and Communication has found that social media sites such as Twitter can be useful in keeping the peace and defusing tensions during times of social unrest. 
- 
                    Learning about history from food utensilshttps://le.ac.uk/news/2015/september/learning-about-history-from-food-utensils What do dinner utensils say about Roman social interactions? Archaeologists and Big Data experts will be gathering at the University for a series of workshops between 26-27 September at College Court Conference Centre to provide some answers to that question.