Articles tagged with 'international development' | University of Manchester

Newsroom University of Manchester (international development)

2023
09
November
2023
| 16:03 Europe/London
The African Cities Research Consortium (ACRC) based at The University of Manchester is commencing pilot action research projects in four African cities: Nairobi, Kenya; Harare, Zimbabwe; Maiduguri, Nigeria and Mogadishu, Somalia.
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2022
23
March
2022
| 16:15 Europe/London
Scientists have identified six proteins implicated in rheumatic heart disease (RHD) which could revolutionise the way in which the condition is treated and diagnosed in the developing world.
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2020
18
September
2020
| 17:30 Europe/London
The Christie NHS Foundation Trust and The University of Manchester helped mark an ongoing partnership with Kenyatta University Teaching, Referral and Research Hospital (KUTRRH) in Kenya by taking part in the official opening ceremony.
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2019
07
November
2019
| 11:42 Europe/London
New research from The University of Manchester explores the strategies used by latecomer economies to play catch-up to the digital world.
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2018
20
December
2018
| 15:00 Europe/London
Health professionals who volunteer in the developing world are providing substantial benefits to the NHS when they return, according to the Universities of Manchester, Nottingham and Health Education England researchers.
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21
August
2018
| 15:58 Europe/London
A black Bond? It’s an apparently unproblematic and straightforward question, right? Well, not quite. When suggested quite quizzically by a colleague, it sparked a series of reactionary positions in the staff room, especially from the 007
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25
June
2018
| 20:00 Europe/London
A potential new way of treating cerebral malaria has been discovered by scientists at the Universities of Manchester and Glasgow, in a study using mice.
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2014
09
April
2014
| 01:00 Europe/London
Celebrities working with international charities are at their most useful when they work behind the scenes speaking to movers and shakers, rather than filling column inches of newspapers, according to new research. Two surveys by Professor Dan
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