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22518 results for: ‘students announcements family event for international students’

  • Migration and the making of Leicester

    Fifty years on from the Ugandan Asians' arrival The expulsion of the Asian population of Uganda in August/September 1972 was a key moment in Leicester’s recent history.

  • Access to facilities and equipment

    Find out about our number of services available that provide additional scientific resources to industry. Using the University's facilities ensures a high-quality service.

  • Centre for Consumer and Essential Services

    The Consumer and Essential Services Unit (CESU) combines legal and social policy expertise to explore the effects for consumers of regulation and provision of essential services.

  • How a technological revolution is helping us to understand the human Y chromosome

    Professor Mark Jobling (pictured) from the Department of Genetics and Genome Biology has published a new review in Nature Reviews Genetics with a colleague from the Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute in Cambridge which examines the properties of the human Y chromosome and...

  • Library Special Collections: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 11

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Presidential transition resources.

    Posted by Andrew Dunn in Social Sciences and Humanities Librarians’ Blog on November 18, 2016 The Newseum front page archives is creating a web archive of worldwide newspaper front page images for election day so you can browse images of the headlines from hundreds of...

  • Winter 2018 workshop

    Explore our minimal surfaces project winter 2018 workshop held at the University of Granada.

  • Introducing… the Leicester Grading System for Foveal Hypoplasia

    A team of eye researchers have published the first medical grading system named after the city of Leicester.

  • Crime fiction in translation

    Find out more about our event: Crime fiction in translation, with speaker Dr Karen Seago.

  • Research into completers and non-completers of offending behaviour programmes could have implications for practice

    A study by Dr Emma Palmer (pictured) in the Department of Neuroscience, Psychology and Behaviour has highlighted the importance of ensuring high-risk and impulsive offenders complete rehabilitation programmes and that some offenders require extra support to engage...

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