Gender, violence and the criminal justice system
Gender, violence and the criminal justice system research within the Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation and Social Exclusion.
Gender, violence and the criminal justice system research within the Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation and Social Exclusion.
Prisons and punishment research within the Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation and Social Exclusion.
Our research is applicable to clinical and sport and exercise biomechanics. Our focus includes: musculo-skeletal growth and development, gait analysis, virtual rehabilitation, postural stability, footwear biomechanics, and artificial neural networks.
Find out how to contact the Department of Sociology and its staff members.
Over five days, students from across the UK and Malaysia will come together at the Universiti Malaya to discuss issues and identify solutions based around United Nations Sustainable Development Goals and Equality in Higher Education.
Pursue your degree online with LJMU programmes offered through Unicaf’s flexible online learning platform.
Research undertaken by CCSE members of the Children and Youth Research Group seeks to explore the experiences of children and young people who come into contact with the Youth Justice System.
The Centre for the Port and Maritime History focuses on port cities and examines their relationship to maritime ventures and enterprise. Research examines: urban history, British merchant marine advertising, Liverpool and the British Empire in the eighteenth and twentieth centuries.
Find out more about current PhD positions available to apply for within the School of Biological and Environmental Sciences.
Within the Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour we are involved in research which looks at perception, attention, emotion, learning and memory, sensory and motor processes, and includes animal models of neurobehavioral research. We investigate cognitive and brain mechanisms in psychologically and neurologically intact animals and humans, and the disruption of these processes caused by drugs, brain damage, ageing or atypical development.