Exploring the impact of creative transpersonal psychology practices in person-centred coaching
Exploring the impact of creative transpersonal psychology practices in person-centred coaching
Exploring the impact of creative transpersonal psychology practices in person-centred coaching
Accredited programmes are at the heart of our offer at the Liverpool Business School and can be client based or open programmes.
Our Criminology degree programme at LJMU takes our students on a thought provoking and engaging critical exploration of the institutions which make up the criminal justice system.
The Psychology and Criminology Network seeks to understand and support victims and witnesses of crime, the rehabilitation of offenders, international policing practice, policy and culture and aid forensic practitioner resilience.
LJMU psychology students present their research projects at the Psychology Student Conference. You can read the abstracts from the most recent conference.
Explore the suicide and self-harm research theme within the Forensic Psychology Research Group in RCBB.
Research Centre for Brain and Behaviour staff carry out high quality research in a range of areas such as developmental psychology, human factors, cognition, health psychology, consciousness and substance abuse. See the academic staff at LJMU's School of Psychology.
LJMU will host an Experimental Psychology Society workshop entitled: Modularity in Time Perception and Timed Behaviour on 19 January 2017.
More effective measures of detection are needed to help stop the trade in illegal animal products. An LJMU graduate is working on an innovative approach to address the problem.
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.