LJMU: Our 12 Highlights of 2024!
Highlights and successes of 2024
Highlights and successes of 2024
Thanks to the generosity of staff and students for the 2017 Whitechapel/LJMU Christmas Appeal, the University collected nearly 100 boxes of donations for homeless people and families in Liverpool.
The seminar will provide an opportunity for exploration through some of the findings from the HEFCE funded project.
In a new study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA, an international research team, led by Uppsala University with co-author Linus Girdland-Flink of LJMU, discovered kin relationships among Stone Age individuals buried in megalithic tombs on Ireland and in Sweden.
Director of Service Prosecutions and former United Nations International Prosecutor Andrew Cayley CMG QC FRSA made a ‘call to arms’ as he addressed the audience as the latest guest speaker at the LJMU Roscoe lecture series.
Liverpool has announced it is to submit a “compelling bid” to host Channel 4’s new national headquarters.
Following International Women’s Day (8 March) and ahead of St Patrick’s Day (17 March), our Diversity and Inclusion team is looking at some of the Irish women who have made a significant contribution to Liverpool.
Bursaries, scholarships and grants to students top £10million for the first time as cost-of-living bites
Catherine Cole is a Professor in Creative Writing. We find out about her career and how she is doing her part to empower women.
New fossils are the missing link that settles a decades old debate proving early hominins used their upper limbs to climb like apes, and their lower limbs to walk like humans