Local green spaces
Find out more about LJMU green spaces, a series of projects taking place across the University with both staff and student involvement.
Find out more about LJMU green spaces, a series of projects taking place across the University with both staff and student involvement.
Wildlife conservation graduate Lucy has used the knowledge and skills gained during her undergraduate studies at LJMU to carve out her own unique career as an ecologist and conservation detection dog handler.
Lucy Day is a Research Impact Officer within our Research and Innovation Services here at LJMU. She graduated from LJMU in 2002 in psychology and biology and has been working at LJMU since 2010.
Lucy is an alumnus of our MBA programme and is now the strategic relations lead for place with Liverpool City Council. Alongside her studies, Lucy was part of the team that supported the mayoral campaign for Joanne Anderson, who became the first directly elected Black woman to take on the position, while overcoming personal challenges to still gain a first-class degree.
Develop first episode psychosis assessment and treatment skills at LJMU for early intervention and recovery-focused care. | Apply now for 2026 entry
Dr Sasha Kosanic is an interdisciplinary scientist whose research focuses on answering complex questions about climate change and the impact it is having on nature and societies. She is also an advocate for inclusion in education, as a former Paralympian and a scientist living with Cerebral Palsy, she looks to highlight inequalities wherever she finds them and to drive forwards change in research and academia.
Sarah Wright is a Circuit Judge at Sheffield Combined Court and was one of 10 Bicentenary honorary fellows chosen to mark the university’s 200th anniversary in 2023. She is a graduate of Liverpool Polytechnic and has dedicated herself to the law and judicial system for more than 40 years.
Find out more about the Honorary Fellows awarded in 2026.
Read the oration for Tate Liverpool for the presentation of their Corporate Award of Liverpool John Moores University.
It may be one of the world's oldest and best-known concert societies, but the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic is as culturally relevant today as it always has been.