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8415 results for: ‘吃鸡软件介绍aspcms网站模板整站源码✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.OxlOWdaVmHoS’

  • The Power of the Criminal Corpse: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Pregnancy in landscape – the rise of the banner bump

    Julia Clark examines the overwhelming prevalence of 'banner bumps' in media representations of pregnancy

  • Financial Models and Society: Villains or Scapegoats?

    Posted by hconnolly in School of Business Blog on October 24, 2018   In this post Dr Ekaterina Svetlova, Associate Professor in Finance and Accounting in ULSB,  discusses her new book assessing the influence of financial models on markets and society.

  • Sustainability in the Workplace is About More than the Environment

    Organisations need to think about sustainability when it comes to employees, not just the environment. Working with academics to conduct studies of employee involvement in relation to sustainability could lead to increases in productivity

  • Macron’s labour reforms are a major test for France’s trade unions

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on November 14, 2017   Heather Connolly, Associate Professor of Employment Relations at ULSB ( hmc33@le.ac.uk ), on why President Macron’s labour reforms are a major test for France’s trade unions.

  • Summer Holidays

    Blog post recalling Summer Holidays taken by people from Leicester and Leicestershire, as recorded in the East Midlands Oral History Archive

  • People

    Browse our list of academic staff, university fellows and honorary visiting staff and find out how to get in touch via telephone and email.

  • Publications

    Learn more about the publications produced by the academics and students in the Centre for English Local History.

  • Participants and talks

    Learn more about the titles and abstracts of the myriad speakers at the autumn 2019 workshop at the University of Leicester.

  • Arthur Edward Davis (1882-1916)

    Arthur Edward Davis was educated at Mill Hill School, London. He became a cricketer of distinction and played for Leicestershire. In the great War he joined as a Private the 11th Royal Fusiliers and served in France, where he was killed in 1916.

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