Competitive football players have superior vision, LJMU-led study suggests
A new study lead by LJMU has found that the visual abilities of competitive football players are substantially better than those of healthy non-athletes.
A new study lead by LJMU has found that the visual abilities of competitive football players are substantially better than those of healthy non-athletes.
Read the Graduation review for Thursday 23 November 2017, the first day of our November Graduation ceremonies.
A new institute established by Liverpool John Moores University will drive forward world-leading, impactful research in education locally, nationally and internationally.
The ‘After the End’ project aims to improve the way in which we end global health emergencies by critically examining how endings are determined and what happens after the end is declared.
Pioneering delivery partners gathered at Liverpool John Moores University to showcase the achievements of the Natural Health Service (NaHS) Consortium.
Prof Padam Simkhada, Professor of International Public Health at the Public Health Institute, Liverpool John Moores University, delivered the keynote speech in the International Conference on Mixed Methods Research (ICMMR 2019) at the Mahatma Gandhi University in Kerala, India on Saturday 23rd February 2019. Professor Simkhada also gave an inaugural speech on the implications of mixed methods on health service research during the conference inauguration ceremony.
Her Honour Judge Margaret de Haas QC hosted the first public debate held by LJMU’s Legal Advice Centre, which focused on the legal rights of grandparents.
British Council grant for School of Education and partners in Malaysia to create new collaborative leaning resources
Scrutiny of pilots for Photo-ID scheme cause for concern for legal experts
More than one-third of people with severe mental health problems (SMI) have a co-existing alcohol/drug condition: but the evidence base on which to build effective service models and responses is limited.