Honorary Fellowship: Rt Hon Frank Field MP
Liverpool John Moores University awards Honorary Fellowship to Frank Field MP at Liverpool Cathedral on Tuesday 12 July 2016.
Liverpool John Moores University awards Honorary Fellowship to Frank Field MP at Liverpool Cathedral on Tuesday 12 July 2016.
The European Week of Astronomy and Space Science (EWASS) 2018 will be taking place in Liverpool for the first time next April.
Dr Suzannah Lipscomb delivers a National Identity Lecture exploring why Tudor history is still a key part of the modern British identity.
‘The Roscoe’ returned to St George’s Hall this September with Professor Greg Whyte, delivering the lecture on ‘The rise and fall of human performance’ to hundreds of attendees.
We are pleased to offer this development opportunity for up to 15 women working in academic and professional services roles to take part in cross institutional action learning sets with peers from universities in the North West region. Action learning provides a unique space for women to support each other to overcome work and career related challenges. This opportunity has been taken up previously by 150 women. Participant feedback includes: it was not role specific, so there were a range of individuals with different roles/skills/perspective which enriched my experience and It provided a rare opportunity to discuss issues confidentially outside of ones own workplace which helped me to develop more self-confidence and self-awareness.
Open exhibitions curated by LJMU students at the John Lennon Art and Design building for two weeks
New research co-authored by hydrologists at LJMU has found that more than 3,000 coastal locations in England and Wales are at risk of pollution from legacy landfill sites due to the changing climate.
The Astrophysics Research Institute (ARI) has been named as an official partner in the GROWTH scientific collaboration.
Read more about how LJMU's Liverpool Telescope has helped to find seven earth-sized worlds.
Bonobos are willing to share meat with animals outside their own family groups. This behaviour was observed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and is documented in a new study in Springer’s journal Human Nature