Student Support Fund
The LJMU Student Support Fund offers financial help to students facing hardship. Discover how to apply and get the support you need.
The LJMU Student Support Fund offers financial help to students facing hardship. Discover how to apply and get the support you need.
Read the full oration for Sir John Sorrell CBE and Lady Frances Sorrell on the Award of their Honorary Fellowship from Liverpool John Moores University.
Part of the University’s Mount Pleasant Campus, the Redmond’s Building is neighboured by LJMU’s RIBA award-winning Art and Design Academy and the recently developed Copperas Hill site.
Within the Nutrition and Health Research Group, we deliver meaningful research which examines the relationships between food, nutrition and health. Our expertise includes: nutritional science, nutrition and public health, physical activity and health; and food quality. Find out more about our specific areas of interest and meet the researchers.
Cellular and Molecular Physiology of Lifelong Health has expertise in human exercise physiology, experimental models of muscle adaptation and state-of-the-art mass spectrometry for proteomic and metabolomic studies.
Liverpool John Moores’ Sport and Exercise Science department is a proud holder of an Athena SWAN Bronze Award.
Find out about the range of first-rate facilities used by the staff and students of the Built Environment and Sustainable Technologies Research Institute (BEST) including labs for radio frequency and microwave sensors, highways research, industrial chemistry, soil mechanics, hydraulics, surveying, light structures and materials, structural testing, and concrete.
The Department of Computer Science at Liverpool John Moores University is being funded for a project on cyber security and computer forensics by the Royal Academy of Engineering through the Newton Collaborative Fund.
LJMU will be hosting the annual Liverpool Neuroscience Day on 13 June 2017. Find out more about this event including how to register.
Research suggests that autistic people are at a higher risk of suicide than non-autistic people. Figures show that up to 66% of autistic adults had thought about suicide during their lifetime (compared to 20% of non-autistic adults), and up to 35% had planned or attempted suicide.