Students at the Heart Conference - Have your say!
Submit your ideas now for presentations
Submit your ideas now for presentations
Elaine Smith-Freeman is the Manager of Counselling and Mental Wellbeing at LJMU.
Interview with organiser Dr James Crossland
Legitimate, representative and proportionate policing is vital for social health in democracies, argue LJMU experts.
The Liverpool School of Art and Design has welcomed a new lecturer to its ranks, art critic, historian, and curator Christine Eyene. As well as taking up a new post here at LJMU, she will also play an important role in deciding the winner of one of the best-known prizes for visual art, the Turner Prize 2022, as she has been selected to sit on this years jury.
Young peoples mental health is being tested in this pandemic like never before, according to postgraduate student Shaunna Devine.
A programme to keep teenage girls active during lockdown has found it significantly boosted their strength, fitness, motivation and body image.
Please be aware that major roadworks will begin on Tithebarn Street on Monday 3 June.
The police staff, drawn from Nottinghamshire Police, West Midlands Police and British Transport Police, secured the scholarship opportunity under an initiative known as Project Harpocrates. The project seeks to support law enforcement efforts to recruit and retain staff in the highly specialist area of covert operations and specialist intelligence. Whilst the project was open to all officers one of the specific aims of the project is to increase the representation of Black, Asian and Minority Ethnic staff (BAME) in this challenging and exciting area of investigation and intelligence management.
Researchers at Liverpool John Moores University are set to investigate a worrying phenomenon in the North West of England that is seeing increasing numbers of vulnerable children placed into local authority care yet remain living at home.