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  • Ban Ki-moon’s Archives

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on December 14, 2018 The archives of former Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon have been made available online via the website of the United Nations Archives and Records Management Section.

  • New president’s online collections

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on August 2, 2019 Recently added to the Library of Congress website: the papers of President James Garfield .

  • How is Ownership at Astra Zeneca Open for Pfizer’s Business?

    Posted by Ian Clark in School of Business Blog on May 16, 2014 Ian Clark, Professor of Employment Relations at the School, discusses a controversial contemporary acquisition bid through the concepts of financialisation, ownership and employee relations.

  • Introducing Leicester’s Juno Team, University of Leicester

    Introduction to the University of Leicester's Jupiter scientists.

  • Loz Atkinson’s: The Edge of Forever

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Physics and Astronomy Blog on 2 March 2022 An exhibition at the Attenborough Arts Centre brings together key works from Loz Atkinson ’s ‘Imagined Nebula’ series, which began in 2015 as an outlet for Loz’s...

  • International Women’s Day marked by research leaders

    Andrea Cooper, from the University of Leicester’s School of Biological Sciences, is celebrating the vital work of research network, VALIDATE, as part of International Women’s Day (8 March).

  • Leading Leicester firm supports city’s students

    Master's student Steve Kelsall completes a 12-month placement at Leicester business Hybrid Geospatial.

  • Openness in animal research among UK’s best

    The University of Leicester has once again been named as one of the UK’s ‘Leaders in Openness’ by national body Understanding Animal Research.

  • Monitoring Jupiter’s Atmospheric Heartbeat over Three Decades

    Posted by Physics & Astronomy in Leicester to Jupiter: The Juno Mission on August 24, 2020 Long-term infrared monitoring of Jupiter’s equatorial stratosphere over three decades revealed a natural cycle of variable winds and temperatures.

  • Advertisements from Exponent women’s newspaper

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on August 10, 2021 A historic database of advertisements from Woman’s Exponent  newspaper from 1872-1914, made available free online from Brigham Young University’s Harold B.

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