Liverpool, Littlewoods and the legacy of Sir John Moores through LJMU
A blog by Vice-Chancellor Professor Mark Power delving into the story of Sir John Moores, the man LJMU is named after.
A blog by Vice-Chancellor Professor Mark Power delving into the story of Sir John Moores, the man LJMU is named after.
On Holocaust Memorial Day (27 January) we reflect on some of the past events at LJMU which have shaped our understanding of humanity's worst crimes.
To help keep your privacy and digital security safe, LJMU is outlining three simple ways to protect your data online, with the help of LJMU students who have created videos to highlight the easy steps you can take every day.
As Student Voice Season and the launch of the National Student Survey begin, we caught up with Pro-Vice-Chancellor for Student Experience, Professor Phil Vickerman.
In order to make the most of a recruitment event like this, it is important to prepare ahead of the event. Here are some tips and advice about what you should do before, during and after the fair.
Details of new workshops, guidance and templates to help researchers across LJMU.
Following endorsement at the University Research and Knowledge Exchange Committee, the Academic Board has approved a new Library policy.
LJMU’s Equality, Diversity & Inclusion (EDI) Team, are proud to be working in partnership with coaching and training specialists; Result CIC (Community Interest Company) and are pleased to offer LJMU Managers, Programme Leaders and Personal Tutors (those directly responsible for staff/students) the opportunity to participate in a half day Training for Managers of Staff with Disabilities & Long-Term Health Conditions Including Mental Health, workshop.
Students from India, Jordan, Vietnam, Iran, Singapore and Norway took part in a three-day visit to LJMU.
An international team of scientists, led by the China University of Geosciences in Beijing and including palaeontologists from the Liverpool John Moores University, has shed new light on some unusual dinosaur tracks from northern China. The tracks appear to have been made by four-legged sauropod dinosaurs yet only two of their feet have left prints behind.