TLC 2020 - one week left to submit your session idea
Submissions are still invited from staff and students and collaborative partner institutions, as well as other colleagues working in post-16 education.
Submissions are still invited from staff and students and collaborative partner institutions, as well as other colleagues working in post-16 education.
Celebrating it's 10th anniversary LightNight returns on Friday 17 May 2019, unlocking the doors of Liverpool’s best-loved and lesser-known arts, culture and heritage venues late into the night.
Liverpool John Moores University has been awarded Bronze status by Advance HE's Race Equality Charter (REC)
LJMU is one of the best performing universities in the UK for growing graduate earnings and helping students secure highly-skilled jobs.
Based on online reviews over the past two years, LJMU is ranked as the 6th best UK university according to the StudentCrowd awards 2022.
LJMU has been awarded approximately £490,000 from Research England’s first ever International Investment Initiative (I3). The award has been jointly made to LJMU and The University of Western Australia (UWA) for the international collaboration project, i-CARDIO. The project has a dual focus; the first component is the delivery of workshops to develop innovative ways to detect cardiovascular diseases for preventative intervention using imaging techniques. The second element is the evaluation of Australia’s model of accreditation of clinical exercise scientists and physiologists. The accreditation incorporates university and work place-based learning to enable graduates to secure roles in the healthcare system as recognised allied health professionals.
A new Public Health Institute has been established at Liverpool John Moores University to respond to the varied and complex public health issues of the 21st Century.
The Centre for Port and Maritime History is to host the event in association with the Battle of the Atlantic Memorial Trust, considering the history and legacies of the battle 80 years on.
Law academic Dr Gary Wilson sets out a future road map for a more representative, authoritative Security Council
An international group of geneticists and archaeologists have analysed bones samples, some provided by LJMU, that reveal the ancestry of dogs can be traced to at least two populations of ancient wolves.