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  • Mexican Cookery and the Importance of Chilies – University of Leicester

    Project PI Deborah Toner writes about Mexican cookery and the use of dried chilies therein, based on a weekend of cookery-based relaxation, following the completion of the Consuming Authenticies recipe book.

  • CArchipelago reaches its first birthday with the launch of its new blog

    Posted by in Carceral Archipelago on March 5, 2014 The Carceral Archipelago’ is a 5-year project that has been funded by the European Research Council under the direction of principal investigator Professor Clare Anderson . It runs from 2013 to 2018.

  • Evelyn Waugh Newsletter in Special Collections

    Posted by Barbara Cooke in Waugh and Words on May 14, 2014   Well, it’s taken a while but we finally did it – the entire back-catalogue of the Evelyn Waugh Newsletter (1967-1989), Evelyn Waugh Newsletter and Studies (1990-2010) and Evelyn Waugh Studies (2011-) is now...

  • Management

    Find your research degree supervisor in Management at Leicester.

  • University of Leicester Act 1958

    The University of Leicester Act 1958 is an Act to dissolve the University College Leicester and the University College of Leicester and to transfer the rights properties and liabilities of those colleges to the University of Leicester and for other purposes.

  • Convicts, Indigenous People and Labour

    Postgraduate Carceral Archipelago panel on "Convicts, Indigenous People and Labour"

  • Training

    The East Midlands Oral History Archive team can provide training sessions for groups across the East Midlands. Find out more.

  • Feedback and complaints

    View the feedback and complaints procedure for the Sport and Active Life team.

  • About us

    As the Interdisciplinary Anthropocene Research Group we are researching global challenges and exploring the complex ways in which socio-economic ecosystems impact the Earth System.

  • New Leicester research demonstrates the migrant work ethic exists in the short term

    The received wisdom that migrant workers have a stronger ‘work ethic’ than UK-born workers is proven for the first time, in a new study of Central and East European migrants, from our School of Business.

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