Search

9708 results for: ‘map’

  • How we protect your information

    How we protect your privacy at The United Kingdom Aneurysm Growth Study

  • Starting with the data

    problem-based teaching of data analysis with R and the tidyverse

  • The Bloody Business of the Bloody Code: Dissecting the Criminal Corpse. By Elizabeth Hurren

    Posted by Emma Battell Lowman in The Power of the Criminal Corpse on May 3, 2016   Imagine hearing local gossip that a notorious murderer was about to be executed, and that everyone in the vicinity of a homicide was planning to turn out to see the violent culprit...

  • Anti Social Finance*

    Posted by dharvie in School of Business Blog on February 11, 2015 Senior Lecturer in Finance and Political Economy, David Harvie , suggests the UK’s nascent social investment market is more a matter of imposing market discipline and less a matter of ‘doing well by doing good’.

  • A Snapshot of Collaborative Work in History

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on September 9, 2016 During my PhD study and for the first ten years of my academic career, I researched alone.

  • The double-minded revolutionary

    Posted by Carrie Crockett in Carceral Archipelago on February 22, 2017 In 1884, a Russian woman by the name of Liudmila Volkenshtein was found guilty of anti-tsarist “terrorism” by a military court in St Petersburg.

  • Privacy Notice: Postgraduate Teaching Experience Survey (PTES)

    Information you need to know Postgraduate Teaching Experience Survey (PTES) is a national survey of postgraduate taught student experience.

  • The postcard: wish you were here?

    Read the article "The postcard: wish you were here?" This is part of the Social Worlds project at the University of Leicester.

  • The video game: a legitimate art form?

    Read the article "The video game: a legitimate art form?" This is part of the Social Worlds project at the University of Leicester.

  • Breast cancer treatment could benefit from Artificial Intelligence

    Artificial Intelligence could identify patients at increased risk of side effects from radiation treatment for breast cancer

Back to top
MENU