Student Intra/Entre-preneur Toolkit and Community of Practice
This national QAA Collaborative Enhancement Project started in January 2023, and aims to deliver a toolkit to enhance the wider scale impact of work-based learners on global issues.
This national QAA Collaborative Enhancement Project started in January 2023, and aims to deliver a toolkit to enhance the wider scale impact of work-based learners on global issues.
The Tourism, Travel, Culture and Heritage Research Group (TTCH) at Liverpool John Moores University reflects the inter- and multi-disciplinary nature of these topics. It is composed of researchers with a range of research backgrounds, methodological approaches and expertise drawn from both UK and international contexts.
The Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences (RISES) are a world-leading research institute, highly ranked in REF 2014. Our research staff have been awarded the Research Team of the Year 2015 by Educate North. Find out more about our expertise, people who work here, publications, learning programmes and our services.
Our Substance Use and Behavioural Addictions research group conduct world leading research into the causes and consequences of substance use on an individual and societal level
The Cardiovascular Health and Care Interest Group within the Institute for Health Research is a real-world applied research group that aims to provide healthcare solutions from bench to bedside.
Find out more about the STOP-SV project.
Are you interested in taking part in a research project that aims to identify physiological indicators of listening effort? We are looking to recruit participants for a study that examines the heart- and pupil-related responses associated with effortful listening.
Find out more about how LJMU Business School created a model that re-engineers the relationship between pharmaceutical companies and trials operator, ensuring greater communication and common purpose. Improving patient outcomes through better project management of clinical trials
By interrogating data from coroner, primary care and A&E records, health psychologist Dr Pooja Saini identified a recurring theme; a lack of support and services for people in suicidal crisis, particularly within community settings.
Responsible metrics refers to the ethical and appropriate use of means of evaluating research.