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  • Engineering with Foundation Year BEng

    Engineers solve problems – including ones involving their education. If you don’t quite have the entry requirements to study an engineering degree at Leicester, this engineering foundation degree will get you there.

  • Computer Science with Foundation Year BSc

    In an industry as progressive as this one, there’s more than one way to succeed. If you don’t quite have the entry requirements to study computing at Leicester, this STEM Foundation Year degree is your starting point.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Biological Sciences International Foundation Year

    The Biological Sciences International Foundation Year is for international students who do not meet the criteria for direct entry to undergraduate study in the field of Biological Sciences.

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

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Research as Activism: Researching LGB+ Online Hate

    Posted by ca270 in Soundings: criminology and sociology at the University of Leicester on September 28, 2023 Rachel Keighley – Research Associate and Vice-Chair of the British Society of Criminology Hate Crime Network To understand why activist research is so important, I...

  • Attitudes to Convict Ancestry: Documentary Review

    Posted by Katy Roscoe in Carceral Archipelago on December 2, 2016 In this blog post I review the documentary ‘A Secret History of my Family: Gadbury Sisters’ , which aired in 2016, and discuss how it reflects changing attitudes to convict ancestry amongst British and...

  • 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.

  • The BAME awarding gap: what we know, what we don’t know, and how we might respond

    Posted by Steve Rooney in Leicester Learning Institute: Enhancing learning and teaching on January 31, 2020   There are so many roots to the tree of anger that sometimes the branches shatter before they bear.

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