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  1. Where to seek help

    If you are struggling with your mental health or thoughts of suicide, some useful details are below. If you are in immediate danger (or concerned someone else is) or may harm yourself, please dial 111 for urgent medical advice, or call 999 for an emergency response.

  2. About the Prisons and Punishment Research Group

    Research undertaken by CCSE members of the Prisons and Punishment Research Culture raises critical questions about the role of the modern prison in deeply divided societies like the UK.

  3. Meet the Research team

    Find out more or contact the researchers within the Prison and Punishment research group.

  4. Terriers Project

    The Terriers Project within the Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation and Social Exclusion is a collaboration with Edge Hill University. Find out more about this project.

  5. Reimagining the Veteran: Pedagogy, Policy and Arts

    Reimagining the Veteran is one of the strands within the Artivism Research Group. It aims to bring together academics, the arts, policymakers and advocates with veteran communities. Find out more about this project and watch the interviews.

  6. Serious Games

    Serious Games is one of the strands of the Artivism Research Group. A major project of the Group is the board game - Probationary: The Game of Live on Licence. This art piece explores the lived experience of being on probation.

  7. Get involved with Research

    LJMU are always looking for volunteers to help out in our research studies. If you're interested in taking part, find out what studies we are currently running.

  8. Pupil and heart: Autonomic correlates of listening effort

    Are you interested in taking part in a research project that aims to identify physiological indicators of listening effort? We are looking to recruit participants for a study that examines the heart- and pupil-related responses associated with effortful listening.

  9. Five years of Prospero

    Five years ago, Liverpool John Moores University switched on Prospero, a High-Performance Computing (HPC) cluster named for the wise magician in Shakespeare’s The Tempest.