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  1. Dr Carol Cox

    Dr Carol Cox is a former police officer who now heads up higher education’s most successful unit for higher skills in policing in England, the Liverpool Centre for Advanced Policing Studies, part of our School of Justice Studies. Carol always wanted to help in the community and has an unshakeable belief in the power of education.

  2. Professor Dhiya Al-Jumeily OBE

    Dhiya Al-Jumeily is a professor of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and has been teaching at LJMU for more than 26 years. He was awarded an OBE in The Queen’s New Year Honours list of December 2020 for his service to scientific research.

  3. Honorary fellows 2023

    During our bicentenary year, we honoured ten new fellows at a memorable event at St George’s Hall.

  4. Ana Armada Bras: Sustainable Building Technology

    Ana’s lab works on transforming waste products into new civil engineering resources. The team uses bio-based waste from agriculture and industry to make new construction resources with that have resilient, self-healing properties.

  5. The history of Elder Dempster Lines

    Read more about the history of Elder Dempster Lines - the largest UK shipping group between Western Europe and West Africa from the late-nineteenth century to the 1980s.

  6. Pakistan

    See the international entry requirements for students from Pakistan wishing to study at Liverpool John Moore's University.

  7. Control and Logistic Group

    Control and Logistic group have conducted research and implementation on Control, Optimization and Industrial systems for four decades.

  8. Armed Forces research

    Find out more about LJMU's commitment to develop cross-faculty research, to exchange knowledge, and to collaborate with external partners and organisations that focus on the Armed Forces community.

  9. Stephen E. Coleman Best Paper Award

    The Stephen E. Coleman Best Paper Award is given biennially for the best paper submitted to the River Flow Conference Series first authored by a young researcher. This award was established by the IAHR Fluvial Hydraulics Committee in September 2014, in memory of Prof. Stephen E. Coleman (1966–2012).