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  1. Stuart Sutcliffe 1940-1962

    A talented artist who studied at our College of Art in the 1950s and is famously known as the ‘lost’ Beatle having originally formed the band with his friend and fellow student John Lennon.

  2. MA Social Work

    As a prospective future social worker, your ability to present yourself in a professional manner will be assessed, along with other areas, such as your passion for the vocation, and awareness and knowledge of the role.

  3. Finance Department privacy notice

    The Finance team hold personal data of students and their sponsors, staff and anyone else who we make a payment to. The types of Personal data held include names, addresses, Dates of Birth, bank details, salary information, National Insurance numbers, union membership and contributions, pension membership and contributions, and maternity information. In some cases CV’s may need to be retained.

  4. Professor Dr Ian Tracey DL

    Professor Ian Tracey is one of Britain's best known and respected musicians. He is a Professor, Fellow, and organist at LJMU and has been the organist at Liverpool Cathedral since 1980. He plays the music for our graduation ceremonies and has done so for 51 years.

  5. Degree Apprenticeship FAQs for employers

    We answer frequently asked questions that employers have about Degree Apprenticeships both generally and about the programme that Liverpool John Moores University offers to businesses.

  6. King Charles III

    Back in 2007 LJMU acknowledged the then Prince of Wales with an Honorary Fellowship and hosted him during the tenth Roscoe Lecture series. Dedicating much of his life to others, as the heir apparent to the throne, HRH The Prince of Wales was recognised for his services to charity, education and the environment.

  7. William Roscoe

    He is the father of Liverpool culture, a founding father of LJMU and best known as one of England's first abolitionists. The Roscoe name lives on through our public lecture series that fosters informed debate, broadens horizons and perspectives, and upholds the crucial spirit of intellectual inquiry and free speech in which Roscoe passionately believed.