Domestic abuse: better safeguarding can aid prosecution
New research suggests domestic abuse victims are better served by schemes which prioritise safeguarding over prosecution.
New research suggests domestic abuse victims are better served by schemes which prioritise safeguarding over prosecution.
Lecturers from across LJMU will be sharing their research as part of the Pint of Science Festival Programme this May.
More than 100 postgraduates celebrate their Police Now LJMU diplomas
Intrigue, propaganda and conspiracy theories - Dr James Crossland, reader in international history at LJMU, looks back at one of the most bizarre episodes of the Second World War.
LJMU students and graduates attended the influential event in America gaining vital public speaking and networking experience.
Families in Cyprus have been able to finally lay their relatives to rest thanks to a humanitarian project involving anthropologists from LJMU who have recovered and identified remains from multiple war graves.
Read more about the lecture delivered by Chief Constable of Lancashire Steve Finnigan CBE QPM.
Experts have conducted preliminary forensic surveys of skeletal remains belonging to victims of the 1944 Nazi executions in Distomo.
Face Lab at centre of new technologies to name migrant victims.
In addition to his academic work as Principal Lecturer in Forensic Anthropology, and forensic duties as an expert witness, Dr Matteo Borrini of the School of Natural Sciences and Psychology, debunks psychics who attempt to be involved in forensic investigations, and has learnt the art of magic to help decode their strategies.