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  • Archive for March 2025: Page 2

    You are browsing the site archives by date.

  • Universal Children’s Day

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 22, 2019 Universal Children’s day  20 th November was also universal children’s day.

  • Researcher wins Newton Fund Grant for Disasters and Development Research Network

    A new project led by Dr Jonathan Corpus Ong from the Department of Media and Communication seeks to explore how media and communication technologies can be used during disasters as well as promote social welfare in the developing world.

  • Members

    Staff, research student and honorary members of the Centre for European Law and Internationalisation.

  • Moles hate eating sand, Leicester research reveals

    Anyone who has had their day at the beach ruined by the sound and sensation of biting into a sandy sandwich can look to the humble mole for ways of avoiding this unpleasant experience over the summer.

  • Mars Sample Return DWI

    The University of Leicester is leading a UK consortium of industry and academia to develop a Double Walled Isolator (DWI) Qualification Model (QM) for the NASA-ESA Mars Sample Return Campaign.

  • Competing on the centre right: An examination of party strategy in Britain

    This research project provided a detailed analysis of the ideology, policies and strategy of the Conservative Party and UKIP at the 2009 European Parliament and the next general election.

  • Research

    Leicester Law School is a research-led department committed to producing the highest quality of scholarship while recognising the important relationship between excellence in research and in teaching. Find out more about the research undertaken by the School.

  • Leicester scientists in discovery of new type of plant

    Dr James Higgins from our Department of Genetics and Genome Biology has been involved in the discovery of a new type of plant growing in Shetland. Scientists at the University of Stirling discovered the plant – with its evolution only having occurred in the last 200 years.

  • How science got women wrong explored by award-winning science journalist

    The long history of gender bias in science research and the work being done to correct it will be explored in a talk by award-winning science journalist Angela Saini (pictured).

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