School of Humanities and Social Science facilities
Find out more about the School of Humanities and Social Science's facilities, including rhe John Foster Building, Aldham Robarts Library and the Special Collections and Archives.
Find out more about the School of Humanities and Social Science's facilities, including rhe John Foster Building, Aldham Robarts Library and the Special Collections and Archives.
Subject resource guides and librarians listed by faculty and school.
LJMU is committed to making its website and the material provided on it accessible to as many people as possible.
Find out more about the Honorary Fellows awarded in 2024.
Since 1997, the University has hosted over 120 lectures encompassing a variety of themes, subjects and viewpoints that make the Roscoe Lectures a symbol of plurality and respect for difference. Find out more about previous and upcoming lectures. The lectures are available to listen to online.
Find out more about how LJMU Business School created a model that re-engineers the relationship between pharmaceutical companies and trials operator, ensuring greater communication and common purpose. Improving patient outcomes through better project management of clinical trials
For more information about the Reimagining Conflict: Pedagogy, Policy and Arts Centre, please get in touch using the contact details listed on this page.
Prospero is LJMU’s high performance computing (HPC) facility for research. It is hosted and operated by the university’s IT Services (ITS) division, as a service to the university’s research community.
From a Second World War refugee to establishing the Department for Mural Art with the then College of Art, George’s influence on our former art students and on the city of Liverpool has lasted the test of time.
This is a free-access learning resource that is hosted by the School of Humanities and Social Science at Liverpool John Moores University, and is inspired by a new version of Chamber Music, a book of poems published by Joyce in 1907. These pages provide video commentary on both the poetic and musical aspects of Chamber Music, as well as video performances of all thirty-six of the newly composed versions.