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837 results for: ‘ethics4sports’

  • Eight Weeks with Ghost Signs

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library and Learning Services on September 4, 2024 by Grace McWeeney As part of a Museum Studies 8-week work placement program, I worked with the Ghost Signs Collection at the University of Leicester. These are a few things I learned along the way.

  • Should Social Scientific Debate occur outside Academic Journals?

    Posted by Stephen Dunne in School of Business Blog on January 14, 2015 Lecturer in Social Theory and Consumption at the School, Stephen Dunne , attempts to renew a recent academic argument through a more accessible medium Social scientists engage in debates which matter to...

  • Andrew Dunn: Page 138

    Academic Librarian.

  • Getting Away with Murder in Eighteenth Century England. The Surgeon’s Bain and the Power of the Crim

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on March 14, 2016   The Murder Act of 1752 could have created a major new supply line for the hard-pressed anatomy teachers of England, Wales and Scotland.

  • Are we powerless to develop student staff partnerships?

    Power dynamics in student staff partnerships.

  • News archive 2023

    Read news stories from the school in 2023

  • Where Empires Meet

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on May 3, 2015   In a previous blog , I wrote on the theme of the politics of comparison, of the connected history of circulation and mobility that underpins the CArchipelago project team’s approach to the historiography,...

  • Beginnings; Queer Diasporas: a new research project

    Posted by Alberto Fernández Carbajal in School of English Blog on September 29, 2014 I started work on my new project, Queer Diasporas: Islam, Homosexuality and a Micropolitics of Dissent , based at the School of English, University of Leicester, in September 2014, after...

  • Unwell or Unwanted? The Mental Health of Western Australia’s Convict Population

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in Carceral Archipelago on October 17, 2016 By Kellie Moss Western Australia welcomed the transportation of convicts in 1850 as a solution to the economic problems which had affected the colony since its foundation as a free settlement in 1829.

  • Political Cartoons in the Classroom: The ‘Simple View of Reading’ Approach

    Blog on reading political cartoons in the classroom

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