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7375 results for: ‘独立版联通卡CPS/联通分销佣金系统/联通大王卡分销_独立安装版✅项目合作 二开均可 TG:saolei44✅.iHmKQbUgzG’

  • Juvenile Immigrants: An Experiment in Convict Labour?

    Posted by Clare Anderson in Carceral Archipelago on October 7, 2015 By Kellie Moss.

  • Mars Science Laboratory Blog: Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester: Page 12

    Academic and staff blogs from the University of Leicester

  • Friends of the Garden

    Learn how to become a Friend of the Garden and help to promote and support the development of the Garden's plant collections and amenities.

  • Invisible Hands, and the Market as Storytelling

    Posted by Martin Parker in School of Business Blog on October 23, 2017   Valerie Hamilton, co-author of Daniel Defoe and the Bank of England with Martin Parker from ULSB muses on the way in which Adam Smith and subsequent economists have used the famous metaphor of an...

  • An Overview of South Asian Collections in EMOHA

    Posted by Colin Hyde in Library and Learning Services on October 6, 2023 Written by Huma Ahmed.

  • What will human rights laws look like after Brexit

    An upcoming event will see legal minds from academic institutions and public bodies join together to examine the future of human rights protection in a post-Brexit future.

  • Semper Eadem collection

    The Semper Eadem collection is comprised of photographs and interviews. It was a collaboration between photographer Maxine Beuret and EMOHA to document the interiors of businesses in Leicester that had little changed over decades. Learn more.

  • Other information

    Find more information on oral history, such as resources for interviewing and qualitative data.

  • Launch of study into Northern Ireland social exclusion and sport

    Almost 90 per cent of people in Northern Ireland believe that sport is a good way to break down barriers between Protestants and Catholics.

  • Is it possible to cry a river?

    Musicians Arthur Hamilton, Justin Timberlake and unsympathetic people across the world have encouraged others to ‘cry me a river’, a put-down phrase to make light of people’s problems.

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