Double win for LJMU at prestigious Times Higher Education Awards 2025
Liverpool John Moores University is celebrating after being announced the winners of two awards at the Times Higher Education Awards (THE) 2025.
Liverpool John Moores University is celebrating after being announced the winners of two awards at the Times Higher Education Awards (THE) 2025.
Claire House Children’s Hospice, The Girls’ Network, Local Solutions and Micah Liverpool are the university’s new charity partners.
Vice-Chancellor Professor Mark Power signed the pledge to embed social and emotional development within early years training.
A statement on the riots that have taken place across Liverpool and the UK
The annual Susan Cotton and Sue Dunthorne Travel awards are open to undergraduate and postgraduate students in the school, designed to enhance students personal and career development through travel and impactful experiences. Successful applicants for the Susan Cotton Awards receive a budget of £1500 to spend on the trip of a life to their choice of destinations, while the Sue Dunthorne Travel Bursary is an award of £500 to travel anywhere in the UK or overseas.
LJMU deserves the highest praise for their success according to the Minister for Higher and Further Education, after it was the first of only four institutions to be awarded the National Network for the Education of Care Leavers (NNECL) Quality Mark.
New technology using Artificial Intelligence alongside the famous Liverpool Telescope (LT), has been shortlisted for a Times Higher Education Award for Research Project of the Year 2017.
Electric vehicles (EVs) are an important part of meeting global goals on climate change, but with more than half of their emissions coming in the manufacturing phase, product duration is key to ensuring EVs remain low-carbon emitters.
Using reading and writing to manage wellbeing and to support self-development.
Was Manchester Art Gallery's removal of JW Waterhouse's Hylas and the Nymphs a brilliant conversation-starter or a PC act of censorship? History of Art lecturer Dr Juliet Caroll and students give their thoughts