School of Humanities and Social Science
Discover the courses, research, and facilities at Liverpool John Moores University’s School of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Discover the courses, research, and facilities at Liverpool John Moores University’s School of Humanities and Social Sciences.
Biomedical Science Research Group is focused on diseases, disease states and diagnostics of diseases. Our expertise includes: biochemistry, cell culture, toxicology, microbiology, cell imaging and molecular biology. Find out more about our research, typical projects, our researchers and how to get in touch.
Professor Frank Sanderson is one of the pioneering team that launched the sport science degree at Liverpool Polytechnic and was admissions tutor in September 1975 when the first students enrolled.
At the School of Education, we offer professional development courses and programmes for a wide range of educators.
Working in partnership with Mersey Maritime, The Maritime Knowledge Hub helps to meet the training needs of the maritime industry, whether that is through our facilities or through our specialist training courses.
Deposit your thesis in the electronic archive of LJMU research degree theses with due regard to copyright considerations.
Missed an open day? Join a guided campus tour to explore LJMU facilities, including accommodation, the library, and the Students’ Union.
Explore the range of Public Health masters courses we have to offer at LJMU. Develop expertise in public health and addiction studies.
Our interest lies in the evolution of animal societies and the interactions that occur within these societies and their link to emotion, cognition and communication. We primarily study primates (including humans) but also other species including birds. Find out more about the Social Behaviour, Ecology and Conservation Research Group's work, collaborations, publications and meet the research team.
Based within the Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation and Social Exclusion, researchers from the ‘Gender, Violence and the Criminal Justice System’ group ask fundamental questions about how gender is conceptualised within and across disciplinary and institutional boundaries.