Honorary fellows
Our honorary fellows are inspirational and influential people who exemplify the University's ethos of dream, plan, achieve. This page contains an A to Z of all of LJMU’s fellows.
Our honorary fellows are inspirational and influential people who exemplify the University's ethos of dream, plan, achieve. This page contains an A to Z of all of LJMU’s fellows.
Cultural criminology research within the Centre for the Study of Crime, Criminalisation and Social Exclusion.
The Projects, Operations and Workplace Management Research Group develops solutions for the ever-growing challenges in projects, operations and workplace management and suggests alternative ways to improve organisational performance. Our aim is to really make a difference to how organisations are managed in the future.
Do you want to learn high-level mathematics and understand how it can be applied to a range of problems in industry and beyond? Explore our mathematics courses.
Find out more about the Fellows Liverpool John Moores University honoured in 2004 including; His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Sue Johnston OBE, Claire Dove OBE, Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson DBE, Gillian Reynolds MBE, Frank Cottrell Boyce and Dr John Roberts CBE.
Through the Maritime SuperSkills Project, the Liverpool City-Region (LCR) is investing support in businesses to develop high-level apprenticeship standards that are in line with City-Region growth sectors.
Find out more about the Honorary Fellows awarded in 2024.
The LJMU Go Global fund allows students to undertake international projects, from existing programmes such as Camp America or TEFL (teaching English as a foreign language) courses, to individual projects students have designed themselves. Find out more about the Global Citizen and Global Scholar funding schemes available to LJMU students.
Liverpool Health Commission is an independent body supported by LJMU which has been set up to investigate and analyse health care policy issues, with the aim of making practical and realistic recommendations to assist policymakers.
Liverpool Health Commission is a new, dynamic initiative fully funded by Liverpool John Moores University. The Commission aims to conduct independent investigation and critical analysis of significant, key public health and health care policy issues.