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  • Leicester’s Juno Magnetospheric and Auroral Science

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on July 6, 2016 While much of Stan Cowley’s early scientific career concerned theoretical and data analysis studies of the Earth’s outer plasma environment, involvement in work on the gas giant...

  • Martin Coffey: Page 3

    Postgraduate Career Development Adviser, Doctoral College Team.

  • Postgraduate Researcher Careers: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 3

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Shanty Towns and Museums in Rio de Janeiro

    Posted by Sheila Watson in School of Museum Studies Blog on April 3, 2013 Every now and then something takes your breath away and makes you rethink everything you ever thought you knew about museums.

  • TB metabolism

    See more about the impact of studying TB metabolism in the Leicester Microbial Sciences and Infectious Diseases Network.

  • Leicester Cathedral dig finds coffin of asylum surgeon

    University of Leicester archaeologists have found the coffin of the first resident medical officer for the Leicestershire and Rutland County Lunatic Asylum in 1836.

  • The Aesthetics of Authenticity in the Modern Chain Pub – University of Leicester

    Discussion of a book chapter about the "Pub Authenticity-Value Aesthetic" in relation to the JD Wetherspoon pub chain, recently published in an edited volume Biographies of Drink (CSP, 2015)

  • Angus Cameron

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

  • Study in Nature provides potential for cancer treatment targets

    Researchers for our Department of Chemistry have been involved in new research, published in Nature, that provides potential for new targets for developing cancer treatments.

  • Nineteenth Century British Art Reassessed

    Module code: HA3025  British art between 1800-1900 has often been the victim of critical and art-historical scorn, often seen as producing ‘old-fashioned’ or ‘prosaic’ art.

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