Sport playing catch up on women's physiology
Just 12% of studies focus on women's needs, Liverpool symposium hears
Just 12% of studies focus on women's needs, Liverpool symposium hears
School of Civil Engineering and Built Environment at LJMU shows case for novel 'substitute' for concrete
Upcoming artists 'enter the Pluriverse'
Find out more about Professor Warren Gregson's inaugural lecture about elite football at LJMU.
See the production - Fireflies - at the university’s drama studio on Thursday 30 May and Friday 31 May.
RISES revealed as Educate North Research Team of the Year
Dr Ana Bras has been nominated as chair of an international committee looking to find solutions to climate challenges across the whole chain of construction.
LJMU’s on campus recruitment agency, Unitemps, has won ‘Branch of the Year’ at the Unitemps Annual Awards 2024.
Plesiosaurs are an extinct group of marine reptiles from the age of dinosaurs who are famous for their long necks. The effect of such long necks on how these animals swam is a mystery but now computer simulations are helping LJMU scientists understand what would happen if a plesiosaur turned its head while swimming.
The Football Exchange, from the School of Sport and Exercise Sciences, hosted its first ‘Psychology of Football’ conference. The event, endorsed by the British Association of Sport and Exercise Science (BASES), was attended by over 120 delegates, including representatives from every English Premier League club, the Scottish Leagues and women’s football, with practitioners travelling from across the UK, Holland, Denmark, Estonia, Norway, Germany, Slovenia, Portugal, Poland and the US.