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The 'Principal Aims' of Leicester Secular Society as stated on current (2012) literature are: [1] 1. Challenging religious privilege and dogma We advocate the separation of religion and state, proper representation of people with no religion, the ending of privileges for religious organisations and the secularisation of 'faith' schools.
Ron Meek was born in Wellington, New Zealand, where he attended school and entered Victoria University in the mid-1930s, initially to study law, and later commerce. There he became interested in the thought of Karl Marx, theatre and local left-wing politics.
Martin Wight was born on 26 November 1913 in Brighton, Sussex.He attended Bradfield College and in 1931 went to Hertford College, Oxford, to read modern history.He took a first-class honours degree and stayed at Oxford for a short period afterwards engaged in postgraduate research.
Henig was educated at Wyggeston Girls Grammar School in Leicester, and at Bedford College, London, where she graduated in 1965 with a B.A. in history. She was awarded a PhD in history from Lancaster University in 1978, where she was a lecturer in Modern European History.
A school of thought, or intellectual tradition, is the perspective of a group of people who share common characteristics of opinion or outlook of a philosophy, [1] discipline, belief, social movement, economics, cultural movement, or art movement.
St Matthew's also known as ‘Mashtown’ or ‘Hell City’ by Leicester residents, is an inner city area of the city of Leicester in the United Kingdom.The area is informally north of the Leicester City Centre and is separated from the city centre by the A594 ring road.
Leicester is looking to partner with Shrewsbury Public Schools in order to create a vocational school on the Becker properties Leicester, Shrewsbury eye partnership to turn former Becker College ...
The Stockholm School is a school of economic thought. It refers to a loosely organized group of Swedish economists that worked together, in Stockholm, Sweden primarily in the 1930s. The Stockholm School had—like John Maynard Keynes—come to the same conclusions in macroeconomics and the theories of demand and supply.