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  • Benefits for our alumni

    The University of Leicester School of Business Alumni Network provides you with access to a diverse community of graduates from around the world who share one thing in common, they studied at the University of Leicester School of Business.

  • Early Modern Fantasies and Fears

    Module code: EN2303 Although horror and fantasy were only formalised as distinct genres in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, both have very deep roots.

  • About us

    Research on sustainable finance, fintech, and governance. Fostering innovation, investor empowerment and global prosperity. Partnering for impact.

  • Smallpox in Leicester

    Posted by Margaret Maclean in Library Special Collections on May 5, 2015 ‘The Wyvern Smiles’ from ‘The Wyvern’, (Leicester, 20 November 1891).

  • Award (6.74-6.94)

    Learn more about awards regulations in Senate Regulation 6.

  • PhD students

    Take a look at some of the PhD research currently being undertaken by postgraduate students in English at the University of Leicester.

  • UK’s AI ‘twin’ will use big data to show the way to net zero

    New research project at University of Leicester will use artificial intelligence to inform more environmentally-friendly land use in the UK, and has received £2.5 million from UK Research and Innovation.

  • About us

    Director - Anna Hansell, Co-Director - Karen Exley The Health Protection Research Unit (HPRU) in Environmental Exposures and Health is a partnership between the University of Leicester, UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) and the Health and Safety Executive (HSE), the...

  • To start LGBT history month, the launch of the Queer Heritage and Collections Network website. The Network is made up of professionals in archives and museums who are seeking to improve collecting, access and inclusion.

  • Research into agricultural revolution in AngloSaxon England sheds new light on medieval land use

    Researchers from our University will be shedding new light on how an ‘agricultural revolution’ in Anglo-Saxon England fueled the growth of towns and markets as part of a new project investigating medieval farming habits.

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