Children, Young People and Families Interest Group
The Children, Young People and Families Interest Group within the Institute for Health Research focuses on improving children's health and wellbeing. Find out more about their research work.
The Children, Young People and Families Interest Group within the Institute for Health Research focuses on improving children's health and wellbeing. Find out more about their research work.
We are looking for volunteers aged 18 to 65 to take part in a one-off virtual reality (VR) study about how people respond to different bedroom and workplace designs.
LJMU’s Diverse Futures Sponsorship Programme connects ethnically diverse staff with senior leaders to foster career growth, inclusive leadership, and networking opportunities.
The Liverpool Centre for Cultural, Social and Political Research aims to enable our research on contemporary culture, society and politics to flourish and to identify and illuminate connections between everyday culture, local community and the wider world.
News from Nowhere is now thriving as the major independent bookshop in Liverpool, with its own building packed full of weird and wonderful books on subjects from anarchism to zen.
Award-winning Fine Art alum Anna B. Sexton is a mentor, coach, and entrepreneur. She empowers creatives through mentorship, start-up coaching, and innovation.
Read more about the collaboration between Beverston Engineering and LCR 4.0 working closely together we were able to develop a package of work, concentrating upon technologies which could have significant impact upon component accuracy improvement and waste reduction within the CNC manufacturing process.
Meet the RNA-PAR Team
The Astrophysics Research Institute is interested in star formation, stellar evolution, time-domain astrophysics, galaxy formation and clusters, dynamics and evolution. Our aim is to become an internationally recognised centre of excellence in astrophysics. Find out more about the Institute, including our Research Excellence Framework results and who we collaborate with.
By studying the gas and stars that shape the Milky Way as well as other galaxies in the local Universe, we can understand the life cycles of stars like our Sun, unravel the chemical enrichment history of the universe, and probe the existence of black holes across a wide mass spectrum.